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Perception of Sound (Phase 1: relies on the performance of the auditory…
Perception of Sound
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Phase 2: involves the neurological processing of the information acquired through the performance of the mechanism—brain must figure out what to do with the sound it receives
Organization Stage: to quickly process large amounts of info (like rapidly changing phoneme sequences), a human’s brain organizes the info by familiar components
Evaluation/Interpretation Stage: once the key components of an event (like a speech act) are recognized, individuals apply their own experiences to it through interpretation/evaluation
Memory Stage: to remember a perceived event or moment, it must be stored into memory
Recall Stage: remembering the perceived event later on will retrieve the most important details of it
Blanks may need to be filled in by thinking through the situation again. Persistent recall improves the accuracy of this step
Individuals use previously formed association and experiences to remember events and their personal evaluations of them
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The various theories of speech perception attempt to address how the organization stage as well as some subsequent stages are accomplished