Whether we speak quickly or slowly, we end up conveying information at about the same rate, because fast talkers tend to convey less information with each word and syntactic structure than slower-paced speakers, finds a new study published in Cognition.

Journal Reference:

Uriel Cohen Priva. Not so fast: Fast speech correlates with lower lexical and structural information.

Cognition

March 2017, Vol.160:27–34, doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2016.12.002

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010027716302888?via%3Dihub

Abstract

Speakers dynamically adjust their speech rate throughout conversations. These adjustments have been linked to cognitive and communicative limitations: for example, speakers speak words that are contextually unexpected (and thus add more information) with slower speech rates. This raises the question whether limitations of this type vary wildly across speakers or are relatively constant. The latter predicts that across speakers (or conversations), speech rate and the amount of information content are inversely correlated: on average, speakers can either provide high information content or speak quickly, but not both. Using two corpus studies replicated across two corpora, I demonstrate that indeed, fast speech correlates with the use of less informative words and syntactic structures. Thus, while there are individual differences in overall information throughput, speakers are more similar in this aspect than differences in speech rate would suggest. The results suggest that information theoretic constraints on production operate at a higher level than was observed before and affect language throughout production, not only after words and structures are chosen.

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