2018
DOI: 10.1515/lingvan-2017-0018
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Practice makes perfect: the consequences of lexical proficiency for articulation

Abstract: AbstractMany studies report shorter acoustic durations, more coarticulation and reduced articulatory targets for frequent words. This study investigates a factor ignored in discussions on the relation between frequency and phonetic detail, namely, that motor skills improve with experience. Since frequency is a measure of experience, it follows that frequent words should show increased articulatory proficiency. We used EMA to test this prediction on German inflected verbs with [… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…In this case, quantile regression can be used to predict the 98 percentile of energy demand as a function of time (Fasiolo et al, 2017). For the analysis of reaction times, quantile regression can be used to clarify where in the distribution of reaction times effects are present, and to investigate whether effects change in magnitude across the distribution (see e.g., Tomaschek et al, 2018, for an application in phonetics). be studied without having to bring complex random effects into the model as a safeguard against anti-conservative p-values.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this case, quantile regression can be used to predict the 98 percentile of energy demand as a function of time (Fasiolo et al, 2017). For the analysis of reaction times, quantile regression can be used to clarify where in the distribution of reaction times effects are present, and to investigate whether effects change in magnitude across the distribution (see e.g., Tomaschek et al, 2018, for an application in phonetics). be studied without having to bring complex random effects into the model as a safeguard against anti-conservative p-values.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The model was fitted to the logarithm of the moving standard deviations of the reading latencies from the SPR task. We evaluated the model at the midpoint of the first quartile (quantile = 0.125), at the median (quantile = 0.5), and at the midpoint of the fourth quartile (quantile = 0.875) of the dependent variable (for more details on selecting the criterion quantile points, see Schmidtke, Matsuki, & Kuperman, 2017; Tomaschek, Tucker, Fasiolo, & Baayen, 2018).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Experimental approaches which control morphophonological content or simulate specific speaker or listener effects are increasing, e.g. Lam & Watson 2014, Buz et al 2016, Olejarczuk et al 2018, Tomaschek et al 2018 Facilitated by the availability of large collections of conversational speech and by the development of increasingly sophisticated automatic analysis methods, corpus-based work is growing rapidly, with applications to many fields including sound change (e.g. Hay & Foulkes 2016) and forensic speaker comparison (e.g.…”
Section: Corpus-based Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The neat conception of full acoustic form = higher information content (and vice versa) is not always tenable. Reduction patterns may themselves be highly informative, perhaps not about the identity of the conversation (see also Tomaschek et al 2018). Hawkins (2003) discusses the example of I don t know being reduced to [ ], signalling a great deal about the informality of the situation in which the form was attitude to the question previously posed, but without apparently affecting or obscuring referential meaning in context.…”
Section: Indexical Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%