Abstract

Speech production and reading aloud studies have much in common, especially the last stages involved in producing a response. We focus on the minimal planning unit (MPU) in articulation. Although most researchers now assume that the MPU is the syllable, we argue that it is at least as small as the segment based on negative response latencies (i.e., response initiation before presentation of the complete target) and longer initial segment durations in a reading aloud task where the initial segment is primed. We also discuss why such evidence was not found in earlier studies. Next, we rebut arguments that the segment cannot be the MPU by appealing to flexible planning scope whereby planning units of different sizes can be used due to individual differences, as well as stimulus and experimental design differences. We also discuss why negative response latencies do not arise in some situations and why anticipatory coarticulation does not preclude the segment MPU. Finally, we argue that the segment MPU is also important because it provides an alternative explanation of results implicated in the serial vs. parallel processing debate.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Language Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

  • Most researchers assume that the minimal planning unit (MPU) is the syllable, we argue that it is at least as small as the segment based on negative response latencies and longer initial segment durations in a reading aloud task where the initial segment is primed

  • We argue that the segment MPU is important because it provides an alternative explanation of results implicated in the serial vs. parallel processing debate

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Summary

Possible MPUs

Levelt (1989) initially assumed that the MPU was the phonological word—a stress group that may include multiple words Under this assumption, the phonological word is completely phonologically encoded before it is sent to the phonetic encoding stage. Most researchers assume that the syllable is the MPU (Schriefers and Teruel, 1999; Meyer et al, 2003) Under this assumption, the initial syllable is phonetically encoded after it has been phonologically encoded and executed by the articulators after the entire word has been phonologically encoded. Models of reading aloud focus on the mapping from the spelling to a phonological representation and typically base response latency predictions on the time to generate the phonological representation

Segment as the MPU
Implications of the Segment as the MPU
Final Remarks
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