Author:
Zellou Georgia,Scarborough Rebecca
Abstract
AbstractWords produced to infants exhibit phonetic modifications relative to speech to adult interlocutors, such as longer, more canonical segments and prosodic enhancement. Meanwhile, within speech directed towards adults, phonetic variation is conditioned by word properties: lower word frequency and higher phonological neighborhood density (ND) correlate with increased hyperarticulation and degree of coarticulation. Both of these types of findings have interpretations that recruit listener-directed motivations, suggesting that talkers modify their speech in an effort to enhance the perceptibility of the speech signal. In that vein, the present study examines lexically-conditioned variation in infant-directed speech. Specifically, we predict that the adult-reported age at which a word was learned – lexical age-of-acquisition (AoA) – conditions phonetic variation in infant-directed speech. This prediction is indeed borne out in spontaneous infant-directed speech: later-acquired words are produced with more hyperarticulated vowels and a greater degree of nasal coarticulation. Meanwhile, ND predicts phonetic variation in data from spontaneous adult-directed speech, while AoA does not independently influence production. The patterns of findings in the current study support the stance that evaluation of the need for clarity is tuned to the listener. Lexical difficulty is evaluated by AoA in infant-directed speech, while ND is most relevant in adult-directed speech.
Subject
Computer Science Applications,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference216 articles.
1. Formant undershoot in clear and citation-form speech: A second progress report;Speech Transmission Laboratory, QPSR,1989
2. Talkers’ signaling of “new” and “old” words in speech and listeners’ perception and use of the distinction;Journal of Memory and Language,1987
3. Accessing spoken words: The importance of word onsets;Journal of Experimental Psychology,1989
4. The mental representation of lexical form: A phonological approach to the recognition lexicon;Cognition,1991
5. Speaker identification on the SCOTUS corpus;Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,2008
Cited by
18 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献