How well do Humans Capture the Sounds of Speech in Writing?

Nora Turoman, S. Styles
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Abstract

A large body of research on connections between sensory modalities has shown that deep connections exist between sound and vision, such that people have a tendency to associate certain sounds with certain visual properties, including line-drawn shapes. While recognising the role of written language in audio-visual associations, previous research has largely considered written language a potential source of bias rather than a means of gaining deeper in sights into underlying audio-visual associations. We looked to ancient and unfamiliar writing systems spanning recorded human history, to explore whether humans have tried to encode certain characteristics of speech sounds in the letters they created to represent them. Our findings have revealed that modern humans can correctly identify unfamiliar letters at levels higher than would be obtained by chance, and that scripts which encode a particular sound with a particular set of visual characteristics tend to have more correct guesses. This suggests that humans share certain correspondences between sound and sight, which transcend both geographical space and historical time. The present multisensory demonstration aims to provide an interactive experience of the powerful connection between sounds and written letters through a series of activities integrating vision, audition, touch and imagination.
人类在写作中捕捉语音的能力如何?
大量关于感官形态之间联系的研究表明,声音和视觉之间存在着深刻的联系,因此人们倾向于将某些声音与某些视觉属性(包括线条形状)联系起来。虽然认识到书面语言在视听联想中的作用,但以前的研究在很大程度上认为书面语言是偏见的潜在来源,而不是深入了解潜在视听联想的手段。我们研究了跨越人类历史记录的古代和不熟悉的书写系统,以探索人类是否试图在他们创造的代表他们的字母中编码语音的某些特征。我们的研究结果表明,现代人正确识别不熟悉字母的能力比偶然获得的水平要高,而且那些用特定视觉特征编码特定声音的脚本往往有更多的正确猜测。这表明人类在声音和视觉之间具有一定的对应性,这种对应性超越了地理空间和历史时间。本次多感官展示旨在通过一系列视觉、听觉、触觉和想象的活动,为孩子们提供声音和文字之间强大联系的互动体验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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