Articulatory Planning Is Continuous and Sensitive to Informational Redundancy
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M. Pluymaekers
, M. Ernestus and R. Baayen
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between word repetition, predictabil-ityfrom neighbouring words, and articulatory reduction in Dutch. For the sevenmost frequent words ending in the adjectival suffix -lijk, 40 occurrences were ran-domlyselected from a large database of face-to-face conversations. Analysis ofthe selected tokens showed that the degree of articulatory reduction (as measuredby duration and number of realized segments) was affected by repetition, pre-dictabilityfrom the previous word and predictability from the following word.Interestingly, not all of these effects were significant across morphemes and tar-getwords. Repetition effects were limited to suffixes, while effects of predictabil-ityfrom the previous word were restricted to the stems of two of the seven targetwords. Predictability from the following word affected the stems of all targetwords equally, but not all suffixes. The implications of these findings for models ofspeech production are discussed.
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© 2006 S. Karger AG, Basel
Articles in the same Issue
- Special Section
- Contents
- Further Section
- Contents Vol. 62, 2005
- Editorial
- Editorial
- Original Paper
- Parallel Encoding of Focus and Interrogative Meaning in Mandarin Intonation
- Timing and Communicative Functions of Pitch Contours
- Exploring the Influence of Vocal Emotion Expression on Communicative Effectiveness
- Methodological Imperatives for Investigating the Phonetic Organization and Phonological Structures of Spontaneous Speech
- From Words to Actions: The Phonetics of Eigenlijk in Two Communicative Contexts
- Articulatory Planning Is Continuous and Sensitive to Informational Redundancy
- The Communicative Functions of Final Rises in Finnish Intonation
- Acoustic Patterns and Communicative Functions of Phrase-Final F0 Rises in German: Activating and Restricting Contours
- Between Fall and Fall-Rise: Substance-Function Relations in German Phrase-Final Intonation Contours
- Exploring Prosody in Interaction Control
- A Re-Evaluation of the Nature of Speech Errors in Normal and Disordered Speakers
- Further Section
- Libri
- Index autorum Vol. 62, 2005
Articles in the same Issue
- Special Section
- Contents
- Further Section
- Contents Vol. 62, 2005
- Editorial
- Editorial
- Original Paper
- Parallel Encoding of Focus and Interrogative Meaning in Mandarin Intonation
- Timing and Communicative Functions of Pitch Contours
- Exploring the Influence of Vocal Emotion Expression on Communicative Effectiveness
- Methodological Imperatives for Investigating the Phonetic Organization and Phonological Structures of Spontaneous Speech
- From Words to Actions: The Phonetics of Eigenlijk in Two Communicative Contexts
- Articulatory Planning Is Continuous and Sensitive to Informational Redundancy
- The Communicative Functions of Final Rises in Finnish Intonation
- Acoustic Patterns and Communicative Functions of Phrase-Final F0 Rises in German: Activating and Restricting Contours
- Between Fall and Fall-Rise: Substance-Function Relations in German Phrase-Final Intonation Contours
- Exploring Prosody in Interaction Control
- A Re-Evaluation of the Nature of Speech Errors in Normal and Disordered Speakers
- Further Section
- Libri
- Index autorum Vol. 62, 2005