Cognitive Science JHU Banner
Cognitive Science JHU Logo
nav-bar spacerKrieger School of Arts and SciencesUniversity CalendarUniversity NewsSearch JHU
Home > Events > Colloquia > Morgan

Johns Hopkins University
Homewood Campus
(410-516-5250/office phone)

COGNITIVE SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
COLLOQUIUM PRESENTATION

Thursday, March 8, 2007
3:45 p.m.

Dr. James Morgan
Brown University


The Development of Spoken Word Recognition


Recognizing words in fluent speech is a fundamental skill in language processing, allowing listeners to access semantic and grammatical information encoded in the utterances that they hear. This is one of the first skills that infants must master in learning language. Although word recognition is subjectively instantaneous and effortless (at least when listening to familiar languages), the computations required are exceedingly complex. Two problems in particular must be surmounted. First, whereas we perceive words as discrete units with distinct endpoints, acoustically, words flow into one another, typically with no manifest boundary. Infants must thus learn how to segment words from continuous speech. Second, although we achieve a sort of perceptual constancy for words, different instances (or tokens) of words often vary wildly on any number of dimensions. Infants must learn which aspects of such variation are functionally relevant (i.e., actually signal differences between words) and which are not; that is, infants must learn the phonological system of their language. In this talk, I will present data illuminating how infants go about solving these two problems, and I will sketch a hybrid Bayesian/attractor model that suggests what may be some of the processes underlying infants’ mastery of spoken word recognition.


Cognitive Science Department
Johns Hopkins University
Room 237 Krieger Hall
3400 North Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218
Telephone: 410-516-5250
Fax: 410-516-8020

Home | About the Department | Contact Info People | Research | IGERT Fellowships 
PhD Program | Undergraduate Program | Courses | Events | Department Members' Resources

 Â© The Johns Hopkins University. All rights reserved.