Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Testing for canonical form orientation in speec...

Associated organisational unit

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception. / Plug, Leendert; Lennon, Robert; Smith, Rachel.
In: The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology , Vol. 77, No. 7, 31.07.2024, p. 1443-1461.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Plug, L, Lennon, R & Smith, R 2024, 'Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception', The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology , vol. 77, no. 7, pp. 1443-1461. https://doi.org/10.1177/17470218231198344

APA

Plug, L., Lennon, R., & Smith, R. (2024). Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology , 77(7), 1443-1461. https://doi.org/10.1177/17470218231198344

Vancouver

Plug L, Lennon R, Smith R. Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology . 2024 Jul 31;77(7):1443-1461. Epub 2023 Aug 21. doi: 10.1177/17470218231198344

Author

Plug, Leendert ; Lennon, Robert ; Smith, Rachel. / Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception. In: The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology . 2024 ; Vol. 77, No. 7. pp. 1443-1461.

Bibtex

@article{4fffb626d00144ab88e0506dd6e02d77,
title = "Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception",
abstract = "We report on two experiments that aimed to test the hypothesis that English listeners orient to full pronunciation forms—“canonical forms”—in judging the tempo of speech that features deletions. If listeners orient to canonical forms, this should mean that the perceived tempo of speech containing deletions is highly relative to the speech{\textquoteright}s articulation rate calculated on the basis of surface phone strings. We used controlled stimuli to test this hypothesis. We created sentences with one ambiguous word form (for example, support~sport), to give half of the listeners an orthographic form that includes support and the other half an otherwise identical orthographic form with sport. In both experiments, listeners judged the tempo of the sentences, which allowed us to assess whether the difference in imposed interpretation had an impact on perceived tempo. Experiment 1 used a tempo rating task in which listeners evaluated the tempo of experimental stimuli relative to comparison stimuli, on a continuous scale. Experiment 2 used a tempo comparison task in which listeners judged whether second members of stimulus pairs were slower or faster than first members. Both experiments revealed the predicted effect of the imposed word interpretation: sentences with an imposed “schwa” interpretation for the ambiguous word form were judged faster than (the same) sentences with an imposed “no schwa” interpretation. However, in both experiments the effect was small and variables related to the experimental design had significant effects on responses. We discuss the results{\textquoteright} implications for our understanding of speech tempo perception.",
author = "Leendert Plug and Robert Lennon and Rachel Smith",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1177/17470218231198344",
language = "English",
volume = "77",
pages = "1443--1461",
journal = "The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology ",
issn = "1747-0218",
publisher = "Psychology Press Ltd",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Testing for canonical form orientation in speech tempo perception

AU - Plug, Leendert

AU - Lennon, Robert

AU - Smith, Rachel

PY - 2024/7/31

Y1 - 2024/7/31

N2 - We report on two experiments that aimed to test the hypothesis that English listeners orient to full pronunciation forms—“canonical forms”—in judging the tempo of speech that features deletions. If listeners orient to canonical forms, this should mean that the perceived tempo of speech containing deletions is highly relative to the speech’s articulation rate calculated on the basis of surface phone strings. We used controlled stimuli to test this hypothesis. We created sentences with one ambiguous word form (for example, support~sport), to give half of the listeners an orthographic form that includes support and the other half an otherwise identical orthographic form with sport. In both experiments, listeners judged the tempo of the sentences, which allowed us to assess whether the difference in imposed interpretation had an impact on perceived tempo. Experiment 1 used a tempo rating task in which listeners evaluated the tempo of experimental stimuli relative to comparison stimuli, on a continuous scale. Experiment 2 used a tempo comparison task in which listeners judged whether second members of stimulus pairs were slower or faster than first members. Both experiments revealed the predicted effect of the imposed word interpretation: sentences with an imposed “schwa” interpretation for the ambiguous word form were judged faster than (the same) sentences with an imposed “no schwa” interpretation. However, in both experiments the effect was small and variables related to the experimental design had significant effects on responses. We discuss the results’ implications for our understanding of speech tempo perception.

AB - We report on two experiments that aimed to test the hypothesis that English listeners orient to full pronunciation forms—“canonical forms”—in judging the tempo of speech that features deletions. If listeners orient to canonical forms, this should mean that the perceived tempo of speech containing deletions is highly relative to the speech’s articulation rate calculated on the basis of surface phone strings. We used controlled stimuli to test this hypothesis. We created sentences with one ambiguous word form (for example, support~sport), to give half of the listeners an orthographic form that includes support and the other half an otherwise identical orthographic form with sport. In both experiments, listeners judged the tempo of the sentences, which allowed us to assess whether the difference in imposed interpretation had an impact on perceived tempo. Experiment 1 used a tempo rating task in which listeners evaluated the tempo of experimental stimuli relative to comparison stimuli, on a continuous scale. Experiment 2 used a tempo comparison task in which listeners judged whether second members of stimulus pairs were slower or faster than first members. Both experiments revealed the predicted effect of the imposed word interpretation: sentences with an imposed “schwa” interpretation for the ambiguous word form were judged faster than (the same) sentences with an imposed “no schwa” interpretation. However, in both experiments the effect was small and variables related to the experimental design had significant effects on responses. We discuss the results’ implications for our understanding of speech tempo perception.

U2 - 10.1177/17470218231198344

DO - 10.1177/17470218231198344

M3 - Journal article

VL - 77

SP - 1443

EP - 1461

JO - The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

JF - The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

SN - 1747-0218

IS - 7

ER -