How efficient is speech?

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2003
Journal Proceedings (Instituut voor Fonetische Wetenschappen, Universiteit van Amsterdam)
Volume | Issue number 25
Pages (from-to) 171-184
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC)
Abstract
Speech is considered an efficient communication channel. This implies that the organization of utterances is such that more speaking effort is directed towards important parts than towards redundant parts. Based on a model of incremental word recognition, the importance of a segment is defined as its contribution to word-disambiguation. Thisimportance is measured as the segmental information content, in bits. On a labeled Dutch speech corpus it is then shown that crucial aspects of the information structure of utterances partition the segmental information content and explain 90% of the variance. Two measures of acoustical reduction, duration and spectral center of gravity, are correlated with the segmental information content in such a way that more important phonemes are less reduced. It is concluded that the organization of reduction according toconventional information structure does indeed increase efficiency.
Document type Article
Language English
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