Accent phrases and brain waves

Authors

  • Philippe Martin LLF, UMR 7110, UFR Linguistique, Université Paris Diderot, France Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2017/08/0002/000304

Keywords:

Intonation, brain oscillations, delta, theta

Abstract

Recent experiments show that theta and delta brain oscillations whose periods vary from 100 ms to 250 ms and from 250 ms to 1300 ms are respectively synchronized in phase with syllables and stressed syllables. This means that, in natural speech, syllables cannot be separated by less than 100 ms and more than 250 ms to be perceived as unstressed. Over this limit, they are perceived as stressed but their separation cannot exceed 1300 ms. Considering the brain predictive function as observed in silent reading or self-talk, where restored syllables and stressed syllables activate theta and delta oscillations, a general language acquisition and speech recognition model is suggested.

 

References

Arnal, L.H., Giraud, A-L., M. 2016. Neurophysiologie de la perception de la parole et multisensorialité, in Traité de neurolinguistique, De Boeck, Louvain-la-Neuve, 416 p.

Ghitza O., Greenberg S. 2009. On the possible role of brain rhythms in speech perception: intelligibility of time-compressed speech with periodic and aperiodic insertions of silence, Phonetica. 2009, 66(1-2), 113-26.

Martin, Ph. 2014. Spontaneous speech corpus data validates prosodic constraints, Proceedings of the 6th conference on speech prosody. Campbell, Gibbon, and Hirst (eds.), 525-529.

Martin, Ph. 2015. The Structure of Spoken Language. Cambridge University Press.

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Published

01-01-2017

How to Cite

Accent phrases and brain waves. (2017). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 8(1), 5-8. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2017/08/0002/000304