Nouns slow down speech across structurally and culturally diverse languages

By force of nature, every bit of spoken language is produced at a particular speed. However, this speed is not constant—speakers regularly speed up and slow down. Variation in speech rate is influenced by a complex combination of factors, including the frequency and predictability of words, their in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2018-05, Vol.115 (22), p.5720-5725
Hauptverfasser: Seifart, Frank, Strunk, Jan, Danielsen, Swintha, Hartmann, Iren, Pakendorf, Brigitte, Wichmann, Søren, Witzlack-Makarevich, Alena, de Jong, Nivja H., Bickel, Balthasar
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container_issue 22
container_start_page 5720
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
container_volume 115
creator Seifart, Frank
Strunk, Jan
Danielsen, Swintha
Hartmann, Iren
Pakendorf, Brigitte
Wichmann, Søren
Witzlack-Makarevich, Alena
de Jong, Nivja H.
Bickel, Balthasar
description By force of nature, every bit of spoken language is produced at a particular speed. However, this speed is not constant—speakers regularly speed up and slow down. Variation in speech rate is influenced by a complex combination of factors, including the frequency and predictability of words, their information status, and their position within an utterance. Here, we use speech rate as an index of word-planning effort and focus on the time window during which speakers prepare the production of words from the two major lexical classes, nouns and verbs. We show that, when naturalistic speech is sampled from languages all over the world, there is a robust cross-linguistic tendency for slower speech before nouns compared with verbs, both in terms of slower articulation and more pauses. We attribute this slowdown effect to the increased amount of planning that nouns require compared with verbs. Unlike verbs, nouns can typically only be used when they represent new or unexpected information; otherwise, they have to be replaced by pronouns or be omitted. These conditions on noun use appear to outweigh potential advantages stemming from differences in internal complexity between nouns and verbs. Our findings suggest that, beneath the staggering diversity of grammatical structures and cultural settings, there are robust universals of language processing that are intimately tied to how speakers manage referential information when they communicate with one another.
doi_str_mv 10.1073/pnas.1800708115
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subjects Anthropology, Cultural
Biological Sciences
Complexity
Frequencies
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Information management
Language
Linguistics
Natural language processing
Social Sciences
Sound Spectrography
Speech
Speech - physiology
Speech Perception
Staggering
Studies
Terminology as Topic
Vocabulary
Windows (intervals)
title Nouns slow down speech across structurally and culturally diverse languages
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