4.5 Article

The Influence of Categories on Perception: Explaining the Perceptual Magnet Effect as Optimal Statistical Inference

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Volume 116, Issue 4, Pages 752-782

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0017196

Keywords

perceptual magnet effect; categorical perception; speech perception; Bayesian inference; rational analysis

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD032005, R01 HD032005-04, R01 HD032005-12, R01 HD032005] Funding Source: Medline

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A variety of studies have demonstrated that organizing stimuli into categories can affect the way the stimuli are perceived. We explore the influence of categories on perception through one such phenomenon, the perceptual magnet effect, in which discriminability between vowels is reduced near prototypical vowel sounds. We present a Bayesian model to explain why this reduced discriminability might occur: It arises as a consequence of optimally solving the statistical problem of perception in noise. In the optimal solution to this problem, listeners' perception is biased toward phonetic category means because they use knowledge of these categories to guide their inferences about speakers' target productions. Simulations show that model predictions closely correspond to previously published human data, and novel experimental results provide evidence for the predicted link between perceptual warping and noise. The model unifies several previous accounts of the perceptual magnet effect and provides a framework for exploring categorical effects in other domains.

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