| Literature DB >> 26448563 |
Ogyoung Lee, Melissa A Redford.
Abstract
The goal of the present study was to test the effects of working memory on speech production. Twenty American-English speaking adults produced syntactically complex sentences in tasks that taxed either verbal or spatial working memory. Sentences spoken under load were produced with more errors, fewer prosodic breaks, and at faster rates than sentence produced in the control conditions, but other acoustic correlates of rhythm and intonation did not change. Verbal and spatial working memory had very similar effects on production, suggesting that the different span tasks used to tax working memory merely shifted speakers' attention away from the act of speaking. This finding runs contra the hypothesis of incremental phonological/phonetic encoding, which predicts the manipulation of information in verbal working memory during speech production.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive load; prosody; speech production; working memory
Year: 2015 PMID: 26448563 PMCID: PMC4593506
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Int Congr Phon Sci