Magyari Lilla, De Ruiter Jan P, Levinson Stephen C
Department of General Psychology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Pázmány Péter Catholic University Budapest, Hungary.
Department of Psychology, School of Arts and Sciences, Tufts University, Medford MA, USA.
Front Psychol. 2017 Feb 21;8:211. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00211. eCollection 2017.
In every-day conversations, the gap between turns of conversational partners is most frequently between 0 and 200 ms. We were interested how speakers achieve such fast transitions. We designed an experiment in which participants listened to pre-recorded questions about images presented on a screen and were asked to answer these questions. We tested whether speakers already prepare their answers while they listen to questions and whether they can prepare for the time of articulation by anticipating when questions end. In the experiment, it was possible to guess the answer at the beginning of the questions in half of the experimental trials. We also manipulated whether it was possible to predict the length of the last word of the questions. The results suggest when listeners know the answer early they start speech production already during the questions. Speakers can also time when to speak by predicting the duration of turns. These temporal predictions can be based on the length of anticipated words and on the overall probability of turn durations.
在日常对话中,对话伙伴轮流发言之间的间隔时间大多在0到200毫秒之间。我们想了解说话者是如何实现如此快速的转换的。我们设计了一项实验,让参与者听关于屏幕上呈现图像的预先录制好的问题,并要求他们回答这些问题。我们测试了说话者在听问题时是否已经准备好答案,以及他们是否能够通过预测问题何时结束来为发音时间做好准备。在实验中,在一半的实验试次中,在问题开始时就有可能猜出答案。我们还操控了是否有可能预测问题最后一个词的长度。结果表明,当听众早早知道答案时,他们在问题期间就已经开始言语产出了。说话者也可以通过预测轮流发言的时长来把握何时说话。这些时间预测可以基于预期单词的长度以及轮流发言时长的总体概率。