Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives

This study investigates the influence of frequency on the production of bimorphemic words, and considers which frequency measure is most apt to explain the differences. Previous studies have reported that frequent words are produced faster and more casually than infrequent ones, and that medial segm...

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Main Author: Sung, Jae-Hyun
Other Authors: University of Arizona
Language:en_US
Published: University of Arizona Linguistics Circle 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/270992
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-2709922015-10-23T04:59:13Z Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives Sung, Jae-Hyun University of Arizona This study investigates the influence of frequency on the production of bimorphemic words, and considers which frequency measure is most apt to explain the differences. Previous studies have reported that frequent words are produced faster and more casually than infrequent ones, and that medial segments will have shorter durations. The present study examines the relation between frequency and the duration of medial segments in English derived words by conducting a production experiment with 6 native speakers of American English using 74 English '-ment' derivatives, and pits word frequency, base frequency, and relative frequency (wordfreq/basefreq) against one another as predictors. The results show that models incorporating any of the three frequency measures strongly predict medial segment duration (R-squared = 0.56, with the differences in R-squared between them on the order of 1%. Among the three frequency measures, whole word frequency explained the most variance, across all consonant types. The duration of segments in highly frequent words tends to be shorter than that in relatively infrequent words. Overall, this study confirms that speakers are sensitive to the extralinguistic information associated with the words such as frequency, and in this case, traditional frequency measures (whole word and base frequencies) are better predictors than relative frequency. 2013 text Article 0894-4539 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/270992 Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics, Linguistic Theory at the University of Arizona en_US University of Arizona Linguistics Circle
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description This study investigates the influence of frequency on the production of bimorphemic words, and considers which frequency measure is most apt to explain the differences. Previous studies have reported that frequent words are produced faster and more casually than infrequent ones, and that medial segments will have shorter durations. The present study examines the relation between frequency and the duration of medial segments in English derived words by conducting a production experiment with 6 native speakers of American English using 74 English '-ment' derivatives, and pits word frequency, base frequency, and relative frequency (wordfreq/basefreq) against one another as predictors. The results show that models incorporating any of the three frequency measures strongly predict medial segment duration (R-squared = 0.56, with the differences in R-squared between them on the order of 1%. Among the three frequency measures, whole word frequency explained the most variance, across all consonant types. The duration of segments in highly frequent words tends to be shorter than that in relatively infrequent words. Overall, this study confirms that speakers are sensitive to the extralinguistic information associated with the words such as frequency, and in this case, traditional frequency measures (whole word and base frequencies) are better predictors than relative frequency.
author2 University of Arizona
author_facet University of Arizona
Sung, Jae-Hyun
author Sung, Jae-Hyun
spellingShingle Sung, Jae-Hyun
Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives
author_sort Sung, Jae-Hyun
title Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives
title_short Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives
title_full Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives
title_fullStr Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives
title_full_unstemmed Frequency and acoustic reduction in English -ment derivatives
title_sort frequency and acoustic reduction in english -ment derivatives
publisher University of Arizona Linguistics Circle
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/270992
work_keys_str_mv AT sungjaehyun frequencyandacousticreductioninenglishmentderivatives
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