论文标题
韵律泄漏到单词的记忆中
Prosody leaks into the memories of words
论文作者
论文摘要
在上下文中,单词的平均可预测性(又称信息)已显示为调节单词持续时间(Seyfarth,2014年)。所有其他是平等的,在更可预测的环境中倾向于发生的单词比在较不可预测的环境中发生的单词短。关于持续时间的信息效应的一个说法是,概率减少的声学细节是作为单词心理表示的一部分存储的。其他研究认为,可预测性效应与韵律结构相关。为了评估语音生产中信息性影响的潜在韵律基础,本研究将过去的工作扩展到两个方向上;它以另一种大型语言(普通话)调查了信息效应,并将研究范围扩大到了额外的声学维度,音高和强度,已知是韵律韵律的突出。内容词的声学信息是从大型电话交谈语音语料库中提取的,其中有40万个令牌和6,000个单词类型由1,655个人说出,并使用从4.31亿个单词subtitle coppus估计的频率统计数据进行了分析。结果表明,信息较低的单词的持续时间较短,从而复制了英语中发现的效果。此外,信息对最大音高和强度有重大影响,这两个语音维度与韵律突出相关。这些结果扩展了这种解释,表明可预测性与韵律的突出密切相关,并且单词的词汇表示包括与其在话语中平均韵律相关的语音细节。换句话说,词典吸收了韵律对语音生产的影响。
The average predictability (aka informativity) of a word in context has been shown to condition word duration (Seyfarth, 2014). All else being equal, words that tend to occur in more predictable environments are shorter than words that tend to occur in less predictable environments. One account of the informativity effect on duration is that the acoustic details of probabilistic reduction are stored as part of a word's mental representation. Other research has argued that predictability effects are tied to prosodic structure in integral ways. With the aim of assessing a potential prosodic basis for informativity effects in speech production, this study extends past work in two directions; it investigated informativity effects in another large language, Mandarin Chinese, and broadened the study beyond word duration to additional acoustic dimensions, pitch and intensity, known to index prosodic prominence. The acoustic information of content words was extracted from a large telephone conversation speech corpus with over 400,000 tokens and 6,000 word types spoken by 1,655 individuals and analyzed for the effect of informativity using frequency statistics estimated from a 431 million word subtitle corpus. Results indicated that words with low informativity have shorter durations, replicating the effect found in English. In addition, informativity had significant effects on maximum pitch and intensity, two phonetic dimensions related to prosodic prominence. Extending this interpretation, these results suggest that predictability is closely linked to prosodic prominence, and that the lexical representation of a word includes phonetic details associated with its average prosodic prominence in discourse. In other words, the lexicon absorbs prosodic influences on speech production.