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How sleep redraws phonemic categories after auditory selective adaptation

journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-23, 14:09 authored by N Dumay, AG Samuel
<p dir="ltr">After information has either been perceived or brought into working memory from long term memory, it may remain active for hours or days. There is extensive evidence that sleep can consolidate newly-learned material into long term memory, and some recent work shows that sleep may also help clear out either unneeded or already established information. We examine the effect of sleep on a third type of information: adjustments to established speech categories caused by repeated exposure to a speech sound-selective adaptation. We find that sleep does not consolidate selective adaptation per se. Instead, sleep implements a change in phoneme category frequency to reflect the properties of the input-the many instances of the adapting sound that had been presented repeatedly. While adaptation temporarily reduces the perception of tokens similar to the repeating sound, sleep increases their perception, producing a "reverse adaptation" pattern. The results constrain models of phoneme category adjustment, favoring those that have separate mechanisms for assimilative versus contrastive effects (e.g., Snyder et al., 2015) over those with a single mechanism for both types of effects (Kleinschmidt & Jaeger, 2015).</p>

Funding

Basque Government

CEX2020-001010/AEI/10.13039/501100011033

ES/R006288/1

Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)

European Regional Development Fund

PID2020- 113348GB-I00

Spanish State Research Agency

History

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Rights

© 2025 The author(s). For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.

Rights Retention Status

  • No

Submission date

2025-02-21

Notes

Code availability. Our analysis and visualization r-scripts are publicly available through the OSF platform: https://osf.io/wakgy/ This is the author accepted manuscript. Availability of data and materials. Our stimuli and data are publicly available through the OSF platform: https://osf.io/wakgy/

Journal

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review

Publisher

Springer / Psychonomic Society

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2025-08-12T11:32:17Z

Citation

Awaiting citation and DOI

Department

  • Psychology

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