Abstract

The presence of an intonational phrase boundary is often marked by three major acoustic cues: pause, final lengthening, and pitch reset. The present study investigates how these three acoustic cues are weighted in the perception of intonational phrase boundaries in two experiments. Sentences that contained two intonational phrases with a critical boundary between them were used as the experimental stimuli. The roles of the three acoustic cues at the critical boundary were manipulated in five conditions. The first condition featured none of the acoustic cues. The following three conditions featured only one cue each: pause, final lengthening, and pitch reset, respectively. The fifth condition featured both pause duration and pre-final lengthening. A baseline condition was also included in which all three acoustic cues were preserved intact. Listeners were asked to detect the presence of the critical boundaries in Experiment 1 and judge the strength of the critical boundaries in Experiment 2. The results of both experiments showed that listeners used all three acoustic cues in the perception of prosodic boundaries. More importantly, these acoustic cues were weighted differently across the two experiments: Pause was a more powerful perceptual cue than both final lengthening and pitch reset, with the latter two cues perceptually equivalent; the effect of pause and the effects of the other two acoustic cues were not additive. These results suggest that the weighting of acoustic cues contributes significantly to the perceptual differences of intonational phrase boundary.

Highlights

  • Spoken language is hierarchically structured into prosodic units divided by prosodic breaks

  • These prosodic correlates have been found to be helpful for listeners in speech segmentation [5,28,29], and recent studies using EventRelated Potentials (ERPs) have shown that the perception of boundaries accompanied by these prosodic correlates elicited the Closure Positive Shift(CPS), a brain ERP component known to reflect the perception of prosodic boundary [30,31,32]

  • The proportion of boundaries detected for the pause condition was significantly higher than those for the final lengthening (p,0.05) and pitch reset condition (p,0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

Spoken language is hierarchically structured into prosodic units divided by prosodic breaks. Pitch tends to decline across the course of an utterance and reset to a higher value after an IPB boundary ([24,25,26]; for a review of the prosodic correlates of IPBs, please see [27]) These prosodic correlates have been found to be helpful for listeners in speech segmentation [5,28,29], and recent studies using EventRelated Potentials (ERPs) have shown that the perception of boundaries accompanied by these prosodic correlates elicited the Closure Positive Shift(CPS), a brain ERP component known to reflect the perception of prosodic boundary [30,31,32]

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