ABSTRACT
Introduction
Five studies examined the speech to song illusion, the verbal transformation effect, and the sound to music illusion in order to determine if they were distinct phenomena and to assess if they could be accounted for by a single perceptual/cognitive mechanism.
Methods
In Study 1, word lists varying in length from 1 word (as often used to study the verbal transformation effect) to 4 words (as often used to study the speech to song illusion) were presented to participants for 4 minutes to investigate the percepts that were elicited. In Study 2 participants were asked to indicate YES/NO if they experienced the speech to song illusion when listening to word-lists modified by a vocoder. In Studies 3–5 participants were asked to click a button as soon as the shift in percept occurred from speech (or sound) to a music-like percept to assess the time-course of the speech to song (or sound to music) illusion.
Results
Study 1 shows that the verbal transformation effect and the speech to song illusion elicit similar percepts. In Study 2 participants indicated that the speech-like stimuli elicited the speech to song illusion more than the noise-like stimuli. In Studies 3–5 similar time-courses were observed for the speech to song illusion and the sound to music illusion.
Discussion
Previous, single-mechanism accounts of the speech to song illusion are discussed, but none of them adequately account for all of the results presented here. A new model is proposed that appeals to both a perceptual/“lower-level” mechanism and a cognitive/“higher-level” mechanism.
Acknowledgments
We thank Sarah K. Brummett and Maddie Kentch for their assistance in collecting data in several of the studies reported here.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Data availability statement
The data associated with this paper are available upon request from the corresponding author.
Notes
1. These categories are intended merely as a narrative aid in the reporting of our investigations, not as a scientifically established taxonomy. Indeed, the verbal transformation effect and the speech to song illusion can be elicited with made-up words that do not exist in a given language (e.g., Castro et al., Citation2018; Shoaf & Pitt, Citation2002).