4.2 Article

Is Phonology Embodied? Evidence from Mechanical Stimulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 3, Pages 597-626

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10936-022-09871-x

Keywords

Phonology; Embodiment; Abstraction; Motor simulation; Syllable structure; Sonority; Speech perception

Funding

  1. NSF [1733984]
  2. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci
  3. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie [1733984] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study investigates whether syllable preferences are derived from motor simulation. The results suggest that motor stimulation can selectively modulate the perception of speech stimuli but does not affect sensitivity to syllable structure. This indicates that certain aspects of speech perception are embodied while others may be abstract.
Across languages, certain syllables are systematically preferred to others (e.g., plaf > ptaf). Here, we examine whether these preferences arise from motor simulation. In the simulation account, ill-formed syllables (e.g., ptaf) are disliked because their motor plans are harder to simulate. Four experiments compared sensitivity to the syllable structure of labial- vs. corona-initial speech stimuli (e.g., plaf > pnaf > ptaf vs. traf > tmaf > tpaf); meanwhile, participants (English vs. Russian speakers) lightly bit on their lips or tongues. Results suggested that the perception of these stimuli was selectively modulated by motor stimulation (e.g., stimulating the tongue differentially affected sensitivity to labial vs. coronal stimuli). Remarkably, stimulation did not affect sensitivity to syllable structure. This dissociation suggests that some (e.g., phonetic) aspects of speech perception are reliant on motor simulation, hence, embodied; others (e.g., phonology), however, are possibly abstract. These conclusions speak to the role of embodiment in the language system, and the separation between phonology and phonetics, specifically.

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