Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration

It is known that acoustic variation is influenced by the predictability of words and the information that they represent. What is unknown is whether acoustic reduction is also influenced by the referential predictability of thematic roles. We tested this question in two production experiments, where...

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Main Authors: Sandra A. Zerkle, Elise C. Rosa, Jennifer E. Arnold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2017-07-01
Series:Laboratory Phonology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/98
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spelling doaj-9d5c58c01d2541b299c69125595189552021-10-02T01:37:45ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesLaboratory Phonology1868-63541868-63542017-07-018110.5334/labphon.9839Thematic role predictability and planning affect word durationSandra A. Zerkle0Elise C. Rosa1Jennifer E. Arnold2Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NCDepartment of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NCDepartment of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NCIt is known that acoustic variation is influenced by the predictability of words and the information that they represent. What is unknown is whether acoustic reduction is also influenced by the referential predictability of thematic roles. We tested this question in two production experiments, where speakers heard a sentence with goal/source arguments, e.g., “Lady Mannerly [source] gave a painting to Sir Barnes [goal],” and described a picture of a subsequent action, e.g., “Sir Barnes threw it in the closet.” We analyzed the duration of full NP descriptions used to refer to the pictured character. We found that duration was shorter for references to the goal than the source, but only in Experiment 2, where the timing of the stimuli encouraged the participant to plan their response incrementally, and not Experiment 1, where participants could pre-plan their responses. The strongest finding across both experiments was that response latency predicted duration, and latency was influenced by the predictability of thematic roles: Goal continuations had significantly shorter latencies. Together, these findings suggest that thematic role predictability does affect acoustic duration, and may be related to the time needed for utterance planning.https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/98predictabilityprosodyacoustic reductiondurationlatency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra A. Zerkle
Elise C. Rosa
Jennifer E. Arnold
spellingShingle Sandra A. Zerkle
Elise C. Rosa
Jennifer E. Arnold
Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
Laboratory Phonology
predictability
prosody
acoustic reduction
duration
latency
author_facet Sandra A. Zerkle
Elise C. Rosa
Jennifer E. Arnold
author_sort Sandra A. Zerkle
title Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
title_short Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
title_full Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
title_fullStr Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
title_full_unstemmed Thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
title_sort thematic role predictability and planning affect word duration
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Laboratory Phonology
issn 1868-6354
1868-6354
publishDate 2017-07-01
description It is known that acoustic variation is influenced by the predictability of words and the information that they represent. What is unknown is whether acoustic reduction is also influenced by the referential predictability of thematic roles. We tested this question in two production experiments, where speakers heard a sentence with goal/source arguments, e.g., “Lady Mannerly [source] gave a painting to Sir Barnes [goal],” and described a picture of a subsequent action, e.g., “Sir Barnes threw it in the closet.” We analyzed the duration of full NP descriptions used to refer to the pictured character. We found that duration was shorter for references to the goal than the source, but only in Experiment 2, where the timing of the stimuli encouraged the participant to plan their response incrementally, and not Experiment 1, where participants could pre-plan their responses. The strongest finding across both experiments was that response latency predicted duration, and latency was influenced by the predictability of thematic roles: Goal continuations had significantly shorter latencies. Together, these findings suggest that thematic role predictability does affect acoustic duration, and may be related to the time needed for utterance planning.
topic predictability
prosody
acoustic reduction
duration
latency
url https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/98
work_keys_str_mv AT sandraazerkle thematicrolepredictabilityandplanningaffectwordduration
AT elisecrosa thematicrolepredictabilityandplanningaffectwordduration
AT jenniferearnold thematicrolepredictabilityandplanningaffectwordduration
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