Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories

Perceptual adaptation is an active cognitive process where listeners re-analyse speech categories based on new contexts/situations/talkers. It involves top-down influences from higher cortical levels on lower-level auditory processes. Individuals with congenital amusia have impaired pitch processing...

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Main Authors: Liu, Fang, Yin, Yanjun, Chan, Alice Hiu Dan, Yip, Virginia, Wong, Patrick C. M.
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159762
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1597622022-07-01T07:02:04Z Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories Liu, Fang Yin, Yanjun Chan, Alice Hiu Dan Yip, Virginia Wong, Patrick C. M. School of Humanities Humanities::Linguistics Congenital Amusia Perceptual Adaptation Perceptual adaptation is an active cognitive process where listeners re-analyse speech categories based on new contexts/situations/talkers. It involves top-down influences from higher cortical levels on lower-level auditory processes. Individuals with congenital amusia have impaired pitch processing with reduced connectivity between frontal and temporal regions. This study examined whether deficits in amusia would lead to impaired perceptual adaptation in lexical tone perception. Thirteen Mandarin-speaking amusics and 13 controls identified the category of target tones on an 8-step continuum ranging from rising to high-level, either in isolation or in a high-/low-pitched context. For tones with no context, amusics exhibited reduced categorical perception than controls. While controls' lexical tone categorization demonstrated a significant context effect due to perceptual adaptation, amusics showed similar categorization patterns across both contexts. These findings suggest that congenital amusia impacts the extraction of context-dependent tonal categories in speech perception, indicating that perceptual adaptation may depend on listeners' perceptual acuity. Ministry of Education (MOE) This work was supported by the National Science Foundation [grant number BCS-1125144]; Research Grants Council (RGC) of Hong Kong [grant number 34000118] to P.C.M.W.; the Ministry of Education, Singapore Tier 1 [RG71/18] and Tier 2 [MOE2019-T2-1-125] grants to A.H.D.C.; the European Research Council (ERC) [grant number CAASD, 678733] to F.L.; and a start-up grant for the Bilingualism and Language Disorders Laboratory at the Shenzhen Research Institute of the Chinese University of Hong Kong to V.Y. 2022-07-01T07:02:04Z 2022-07-01T07:02:04Z 2021 Journal Article Liu, F., Yin, Y., Chan, A. H. D., Yip, V. & Wong, P. C. M. (2021). Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories. Brain and Language, 215, 104908-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2021.104908 0093-934X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159762 10.1016/j.bandl.2021.104908 33578176 2-s2.0-85100459283 215 104908 en RG71/18 MOE2019-T2-1-125 Brain and Language © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Linguistics
Congenital Amusia
Perceptual Adaptation
spellingShingle Humanities::Linguistics
Congenital Amusia
Perceptual Adaptation
Liu, Fang
Yin, Yanjun
Chan, Alice Hiu Dan
Yip, Virginia
Wong, Patrick C. M.
Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
description Perceptual adaptation is an active cognitive process where listeners re-analyse speech categories based on new contexts/situations/talkers. It involves top-down influences from higher cortical levels on lower-level auditory processes. Individuals with congenital amusia have impaired pitch processing with reduced connectivity between frontal and temporal regions. This study examined whether deficits in amusia would lead to impaired perceptual adaptation in lexical tone perception. Thirteen Mandarin-speaking amusics and 13 controls identified the category of target tones on an 8-step continuum ranging from rising to high-level, either in isolation or in a high-/low-pitched context. For tones with no context, amusics exhibited reduced categorical perception than controls. While controls' lexical tone categorization demonstrated a significant context effect due to perceptual adaptation, amusics showed similar categorization patterns across both contexts. These findings suggest that congenital amusia impacts the extraction of context-dependent tonal categories in speech perception, indicating that perceptual adaptation may depend on listeners' perceptual acuity.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Liu, Fang
Yin, Yanjun
Chan, Alice Hiu Dan
Yip, Virginia
Wong, Patrick C. M.
format Article
author Liu, Fang
Yin, Yanjun
Chan, Alice Hiu Dan
Yip, Virginia
Wong, Patrick C. M.
author_sort Liu, Fang
title Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
title_short Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
title_full Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
title_fullStr Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
title_full_unstemmed Individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
title_sort individuals with congenital amusia do not show context-dependent perception of tonal categories
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159762
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