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BIOLOGY LAB 1615 MELISSA VAN BIBBER TUES. 10 AM CLASS SUMMARY OF ARTICLE ON “SPEECH IN NOISE” This is basically an experiment testing language perception associated with hearing and visual stimuli. The professors, Mor Nahum, Israel Nelken, and Merav Ahissar, from the Department of Neurobiology and Psychology at Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel did experiments based on such semantics, mainly to prove the Reverse Hierarchy Theory (RHT). It has been widely accepted in neurobiology that the understanding of language is processed in a hierarchical manner. This hierarchical order is: 1- Detection – Detection is the ability to respond to the presence or absence of sound. It is the essential first step in learning to listen. 2- Discrimination – Discrimination is the ability to perceive similarities and differences between two or more speech stimuli. 3- Identification – Identification is the ability to label by repeating, pointing to or writing the speech stimulus heard. 4- Comprehension – Comprehension is the ability to understand the meaning of speech by answering questions, following directions, paraphrasing, or participating in a conversation. In RHT the order is reversed from “Detection to Comprehension”, to “Comprehension to Detection.” They predicted that their experiment of RHT will show that when not much noise or stimulus is going on around the subject while trying to comprehend linguistics, it is easier for the subject to understand what is spoken or read, in contrast to high stimulus where only a portion of the relevant information can be fully comprehended. In the first study they performed IV experiments involving identification of word sets under binaural (hearing with both ears at the same time) uncertainty. The study showed that they could not predict for similar-sounding words in both ears (diotic) when low-level uncertainty is introduced. So, they changed a few word sets and replicated the first study a second time, but with the same results. In the second study, they manipulated difficulty by increasing the stimulus set size and dichotic (hearing different words in each ear at the same time) listening. They found that the new difficulty did not affect the use of the binaural cues and that more attentional stimulus does not affect the subject’s use of information. They found that when the stimuli they gave was phonologically different words the binaural benefits were identical to those of ideal listener models under different types of task requirements. However, when they gave the same stimuli but instead of phonologically different words they presented phonologically similar pairs the binaural benefits we a lot lower than those of the ideal listener models. The differences could not be explained as far as low-level binaural information is concerned. In conclusion, they found that there are constraints on the use of low-level information, but the constraints had to be formulated in terms of properties of stimulus sets rather than in terms of behavioral difficulty, or general cognitive or attentional demands. Because the acoustic contrast was large for both types of sets, at the lower levels both word sets had distinct non-overlapping representations. They also found that the main factor in determining whether the use of lowlevel information would reach the levels of ideal listeners was the representation of stimulus sets in the high-level. Although RHT was originally derived for visual perception, they argue that it indeed applies to the auditory system as well.