Journal article
Partner-Specific Adaptation in Disfluency Processing
Cognitive science, Vol.48(8), e13490
08/01/2024
DOI: 10.1111/cogs.13490
PMID: 39161165
Abstract
Speakers tend to produce disfluencies when naming unexpected or complex items; in turn, when perceiving disfluency, listeners tend to expect upcoming reference to items that are unexpected or complex to name. In two experiments, we examined if these disfluency-based expectations are routine, or instead, if they adapt to the way the speaker uses disfluency in the current context in a talker-specific manner. Participants listened to instructions to look at objects in contexts with several images, some of which lacked conventional names. We manipulated the co-occurrence of disfluency and reference to novel versus familiar objects in a single talker situation (Experiment 1) and in a multi-talker situation (Experiment 2). In the predictive condition, disfluent expressions referred to novel objects, and fluent expressions referred to familiar objects. In the nonpredictive condition, fluent and disfluent trials referred to either familiar or novel objects. Participants' gaze revealed that listeners more readily predicted familiar images for fluent trials and novel images for disfluent trials in the predictive condition than in the nonpredictive condition. In sum, listeners adapted their expectations about upcoming words based on recent experience with disfluency. Disfluency is not invariably processed, but instead a cue that is flexibly interpreted depending on the local context even in a multi-talker setting.Speakers tend to produce disfluencies when naming unexpected or complex items; in turn, when perceiving disfluency, listeners tend to expect upcoming reference to items that are unexpected or complex to name. In two experiments, we examined if these disfluency-based expectations are routine, or instead, if they adapt to the way the speaker uses disfluency in the current context in a talker-specific manner. Participants listened to instructions to look at objects in contexts with several images, some of which lacked conventional names. We manipulated the co-occurrence of disfluency and reference to novel versus familiar objects in a single talker situation (Experiment 1) and in a multi-talker situation (Experiment 2). In the predictive condition, disfluent expressions referred to novel objects, and fluent expressions referred to familiar objects. In the nonpredictive condition, fluent and disfluent trials referred to either familiar or novel objects. Participants' gaze revealed that listeners more readily predicted familiar images for fluent trials and novel images for disfluent trials in the predictive condition than in the nonpredictive condition. In sum, listeners adapted their expectations about upcoming words based on recent experience with disfluency. Disfluency is not invariably processed, but instead a cue that is flexibly interpreted depending on the local context even in a multi-talker setting.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Partner-Specific Adaptation in Disfluency Processing
- Creators
- Si On Yoon - New York UniversitySarah Brown-Schmidt - Vanderbilt University
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Cognitive science, Vol.48(8), e13490
- DOI
- 10.1111/cogs.13490
- PMID
- 39161165
- NLM abbreviation
- Cogn Sci
- ISSN
- 1551-6709
- eISSN
- 1551-6709
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Grant note
- National Science Foundation: 19-21492
This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation award 19-21492 to Sarah Brown-Schmidt.
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 08/01/2024
- Academic Unit
- Communication Sciences and Disorders
- Record Identifier
- 9984697660002771
Metrics
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