Brain and Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester Rochester, NY, USA ; Department of Computer Science, University of Rochester Rochester, NY, USA.
Front Psychol. 2012 Nov 9;3:481. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00481. eCollection 2012.
We investigate phonological encoding during unscripted sentence production, focusing on the effect of phonological overlap on phonological encoding. Previous work on this question has almost exclusively employed isolated word production or highly scripted multi-word production. These studies have led to conflicting results: some studies found that phonological overlap between two words facilitates phonological encoding, while others found inhibitory effects. One worry with many of these paradigms is that they involve processes that are not typical to everyday language use, which calls into question to what extent their findings speak to the architectures and mechanisms underlying language production. We present a paradigm to investigate the consequences of phonological overlap between words in a sentence while leaving speakers much of the lexical and structural choices typical in everyday language use. Adult native speakers of English described events in short video clips. We annotated the presence of disfluencies and the speech rate at various points throughout the sentence, as well as the constituent order. We find that phonological overlap has an inhibitory effect on phonological encoding. Specifically, if adjacent content words share their phonological onset (e.g., hand the hammer), they are preceded by production difficulty, as reflected in fluency and speech rate. We also find that this production difficulty affects speakers' constituent order preferences during grammatical encoding. We discuss our results and previous works to isolate the properties of other paradigms that resulted in facilitatory or inhibitory results. The data from our paradigm also speak to questions about the scope of phonological planning in unscripted speech and as to whether phonological and grammatical encoding interact.
我们研究了非脚本句子产生过程中的语音编码,重点关注语音重叠对语音编码的影响。关于这个问题的先前研究几乎完全采用了孤立单词生成或高度脚本化的多单词生成。这些研究得出了相互矛盾的结果:一些研究发现两个单词之间的语音重叠有助于语音编码,而另一些研究则发现了抑制效应。这些范式中的一个问题是,它们涉及到的过程不是日常语言使用中典型的过程,这就使得他们的发现与语言产生的架构和机制之间的关系受到质疑。我们提出了一种研究句子中单词之间语音重叠后果的范式,同时让说话者在很大程度上保留日常语言使用中典型的词汇和结构选择。以英语为母语的成年说话者描述了短片中的事件。我们在句子的各个点标注了不流畅和语速的存在,以及成分的顺序。我们发现语音重叠对语音编码有抑制作用。具体来说,如果相邻的内容词共享其语音开头(例如,hand the hammer),则在它们之前会出现生产难度,这反映在流畅度和语速上。我们还发现这种生产难度会影响说话者在语法编码过程中的成分顺序偏好。我们讨论了我们的结果和以前的工作,以分离导致促进或抑制结果的其他范式的特性。我们的范式的数据也涉及到关于非脚本语音中语音规划范围的问题,以及语音和语法编码是否相互作用。