Famous Talker Effects in Spoken Word Recognition

Alisa M. Maibauer, Theresa A. Markis, Jessica Newell, Conor T. McLennan

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Previous work has demonstrated that talker-specific representations affect spoken word recognition relatively late during processing. However, participants in these studies were listening to unfamiliar talkers. In the present research, we used a long-term repetition-priming paradigm and a speeded-shadowing task and presented listeners with famous talkers. In Experiment 1, half the words were spoken by Barack Obama, and half by Hillary Clinton. Reaction times (RTs) to repeated words were shorter than those to unprimed words only when repeated by the same talker. However, in Experiment 2, using nonfamous talkers, RTs to repeated words were shorter than those to unprimed words both when repeated by the same talker and when repeated by a different talker. Taken together, the results demonstrate that talker-specific details can affect the perception of spoken words relatively early during processing when words are spoken by famous talkers.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalAttention, Perception, Psychophysics
    Volume76
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 1 2014

    Keywords

    • famous talkers
    • spoken word recognition
    • talker effects
    • priming

    Disciplines

    • Communication
    • Social and Behavioral Sciences
    • Speech and Rhetorical Studies

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