| Literature DB >> 25599081 |
Meredith Brown1, Anne Pier Salverda1, Christine Gunlogson2, Michael K Tanenhaus2.
Abstract
Two visual-world experiments investigated whether and how quickly discourse-based expectations about the prosodic realization of spoken words modulate interpretation of acoustic-prosodic cues. Experiment 1 replicated effects of segmental lengthening on activation of onset-embedded words (e.g. pumpkin) using resynthetic manipulation of duration and fundamental frequency (F0). In Experiment 2, the same materials were preceded by instructions establishing information-structural differences between competing lexical alternatives (i.e. repeated vs. newly-assigned thematic roles) in critical instructions. Eye-movements generated upon hearing the critical target word revealed a significant interaction between information structure and target-word realization: Segmental lengthening and pitch excursion elicited more fixations to the onset-embedded competitor when the target word remained in the same thematic role, but not when its thematic role changed. These results suggest that information structure modulates the interpretation of acoustic-prosodic cues by influencing expectations about fine-grained acoustic-phonetic properties of the unfolding utterance.Entities:
Keywords: eye movements; information structure; prosodic structure; spoken-word recognition
Year: 2015 PMID: 25599081 PMCID: PMC4294268 DOI: 10.1080/01690965.2013.862285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lang Cogn Neurosci ISSN: 2327-3798 Impact factor: 2.331