Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10457598 | Cognition | 2013 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
It is generally assumed that language production proceeds incrementally, with chunks of linguistic structure planned ahead of speech. Extensive research has examined the scope of language production and suggests that the size of planned chunks varies across contexts (Ferreira and Swets, 2002, Wagner and Jescheniak, 2010). By contrast, relatively little is known about the structure of advance planning, specifically whether planning proceeds incrementally according to the surface structure of the utterance, or whether speakers plan according to the hierarchical relationships between utterance elements. In two experiments, we examine the structure and scope of lexical planning in language production using a picture description task. Analyses of speech onset times and word durations show that speakers engage in hierarchical planning such that structurally dependent lexical items are planned together and that hierarchical planning occurs for both direct and indirect dependencies.
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Authors
Eun-Kyung Lee, Sarah Brown-Schmidt, Duane G. Watson,