| Abstract | Synthetic noises from a [sh]-[s] continuum, followed by vocalic portions that influenced the location of the [sh]-[s] boundary in an identification test, were presented in AXB and fixed-standard AX discrimination tasks. The majority of naive subjects perceived these fricative-vowel syllables fairly categorically in both tasks; that is, discrimination functions followed the patterns predicted from identification scores and showed shifts contingent on the nature of the vocalic portion. However, two subjects achieved much better discrimination scores than the rest, and so did three experienced listeners and a group of less experienced subjects who had received some discrimination training in the AX task. These listeners, who (judging from their higher accuracy, pattern of responses, and subjective reports) successfully followed the nonphonetic strategy of restricting attention to the spectral properties of the fricative noise, were not influenced by different vocalic contexts. These results support the hypothesis that influences of vocalic context on fricative identification are tied to a phonetic mode of perception. |