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Speech perception - Coggle Diagram
Speech perception
Motor theories
It refers to the perception and articulation of a language, this theory was created in 1967.
It consists in the production of sounds and how the listener perceives it, this can be gestural and phonemic while the canversation develops.
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Each sound or phonetic gesture comes from a certain part of the mouth and produces its own unique sound.
From birth, humans relate sounds to gestures produced by other humans.
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Trace theory
It is a model with stages that interfere in the auditory part, this can be your lexical level or your phonetic level.
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It consists of a mapping of each stage this can be of the triphonic representation and the feedback within the same level to stabilize each perception.
Stage theories
It refers to a set of theories that have nothing to do with the production and perception of a language.
For this it has a series of processes such as coding in the auditory process, our nature as human beings.
Direct realism theory
It refers to the perception of speech and how important it is in realism, how we see reality and what our role is in that place.
The movements we make with the vocal tract or intentional gestures are also perceptions of speech because it is information that we receive and process through a decoder.
Speech perception is the process by which speech sounds are heard, interpreted and understood.
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