Projects per year
Abstract
Temporal regularities in speech, such as interdependencies in the timing of speech events, are thought to scaffold early acquisition of the building blocks in speech. By providing on-line clues to the location and duration of upcoming syllables, temporal structure may aid segmentation and clustering of continuous speech into separable units. This hypothesis tacitly assumes that learners exploit predictability in the temporal structure of speech. Existing measures of speech timing tend to focus on first-order regularities among adjacent units, and are overly sensitive to idiosyncrasies in the data they describe. Here, we compare several statistical methods on a sample of 18 languages, testing whether syllable occurrence is predictable over time. Rather than looking for differences between languages, we aim to find, across languages, temporal predictability in the speech signal which could be exploited by a language learner. First, we analyse distributional regularities using two novel techniques: a Bayesian ideal learner analysis, and a simple distributional measure. Second, we model higher-order temporal structure – regularities arising in an ordered series of syllable timings – testing the hypothesis that non-adjacent temporal structures may explain the gap between subjectively-perceived temporal regularities, and the absence of universally-accepted lower-order objective measures. Together, our analyses provide limited evidence for predictability at different time scales, though higher-order predictability is difficult to reliably infer. We conclude that temporal predictability in speech may well arise from a combination of individually weak perceptual cues at multiple structural levels, but is challenging to pinpoint.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 29 Sep 2016 |
Event | Beyond Language Learning - Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Campus Poblenou, Barcelona, Spain Duration: 29 Sep 2016 → 30 Sep 2016 http://www.ub.edu/beyondlanguage/ |
Conference
Conference | Beyond Language Learning |
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Country/Territory | Spain |
City | Barcelona |
Period | 29/09/16 → 30/09/16 |
Internet address |
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Seeking temporal predictability in speech: Comparing statistical approaches on 18 world languages.'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 2 Finished
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FWOTM774: Data mining continuous speech: Modeling infant speech acquisition by extracting building blocks and patterns in spoken language
De Boer, B., Goethals, B. & Jadoul, Y.
1/10/15 → 30/09/19
Project: Fundamental
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EU398: ABACUS: Advancing Behavioral and Cognitive Understanding of Speech
Van Der Ham, A., Little, H. R., Eryilmaz, K., Filippi, P., Rasilo, H., Ravignani, A., De Boer, B. & Thompson, W.
1/02/12 → 31/01/17
Project: Fundamental
Research output
- 30 Citations
- 1 Article
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Seeking Temporal Predictability in Speech: Comparing Statistical Approaches on 18 World Languages
Jadoul, Y., Ravignani, A., Thompson, B., Filippi, P. & De Boer, B., 2 Dec 2016, In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 10, 15 p., 586.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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