Thomas Schatz
2021
A phonetic model of non-native spoken word processing
Yevgen Matusevych
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Herman Kamper
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Thomas Schatz
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Naomi Feldman
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Sharon Goldwater
Proceedings of the 16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Main Volume
Non-native speakers show difficulties with spoken word processing. Many studies attribute these difficulties to imprecise phonological encoding of words in the lexical memory. We test an alternative hypothesis: that some of these difficulties can arise from the non-native speakers’ phonetic perception. We train a computational model of phonetic learning, which has no access to phonology, on either one or two languages. We first show that the model exhibits predictable behaviors on phone-level and word-level discrimination tasks. We then test the model on a spoken word processing task, showing that phonology may not be necessary to explain some of the word processing effects observed in non-native speakers. We run an additional analysis of the model’s lexical representation space, showing that the two training languages are not fully separated in that space, similarly to the languages of a bilingual human speaker.
2014
Exploring the Relative Role of Bottom-up and Top-down Information in Phoneme Learning
Abdellah Fourtassi
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Thomas Schatz
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Balakrishnan Varadarajan
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Emmanuel Dupoux
Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 2: Short Papers)
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