Word informativity influences acoustic duration: Effects of contextual predictability on lexical representation
•Language-users reduce words in predictable contexts.•Wordform reduction may be encoded in representation if it occurs sufficiently often.•Words that usually occur in predictable contexts are usually reduced.•Corpus data show that usually-predictable words are reduced even when unpredictable.•This s...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | Cognition 2014-10, Vol.133 (1), p.140-155 |
---|---|
1. Verfasser: | |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | •Language-users reduce words in predictable contexts.•Wordform reduction may be encoded in representation if it occurs sufficiently often.•Words that usually occur in predictable contexts are usually reduced.•Corpus data show that usually-predictable words are reduced even when unpredictable.•This suggests that predictability-driven reduction is stored in word representation.
Language-users reduce words in predictable contexts. Previous research indicates that reduction may be stored in lexical representation if a word is often reduced. Because representation influences production regardless of context, production should be biased by how often each word has been reduced in the speaker’s prior experience. This study investigates whether speakers have a context-independent bias to reduce low-informativity words, which are usually predictable and therefore usually reduced. Content word durations were extracted from the Buckeye and Switchboard speech corpora, and analyzed for probabilistic reduction effects using a language model based on spontaneous speech in the Fisher corpus. The analysis supported the hypothesis: low-informativity words have shorter durations, even when the effects of local contextual predictability, frequency, speech rate, and several other variables are controlled for. Additional models that compared word types against only other words of the same segmental length further supported this conclusion. Words that usually appear in predictable contexts are reduced in all contexts, even those in which they are unpredictable. The result supports representational models in which reduction is stored, and where sufficiently frequent reduction biases later production. The finding provides new evidence that probabilistic reduction interacts with lexical representation. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0010-0277 1873-7838 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cognition.2014.06.013 |