PopTodd Wrote:
Thanks, Paul!
By the way.. I never found out what your poster was about.
So... info, please?
And how did it go?
Ok well you asked twice, so now its your fault
Spoken transposed pseudowords (PLATSER/ PLASTER) were used to investigate perception of temporal ordering. Low-pass filtered transposed stimuli activated their targets suggesting an ‘ungluing’ of the temporal ordering of segments. When potentially conflicting segmental information is analyzed in a way consistent with misleading coarticulatory information, temporal reordering of segmental information occurs.
Now what does this mean? Well I looked at how manipulating acoustic information could actually make you misperceive the order of the sounds.. so hearing PLASTER even though acoustically, the stimulus was PLATSER...why do I study this? well in an attempt to articulate a realistic model of how humans process spoken words...
It went fine, no one even looked at my poster (that is something Im quite proud of, scare them away with jargon)