ISCA Archive ICSLP 2000
ISCA Archive ICSLP 2000

Phonotactic and acoustic cues for word segmentation in English

Andrea Weber

This study investigates the influence of both phonotactic and acoustic cues on the segmentation of spoken English. Listeners detected embedded English words in nonsense sequences (word spotting). Words aligned with phonotactic boundaries were easier to detect than words without such alignment. Acoustic cues to boundaries could also have signaled word boundaries, especially when word onsets lacked phonotactic alignment. However, only one of several durational boundary cues showed a marginally significant correlation with response times (RTs). The results suggest that word segmentation in English is influenced primarily by phonotactic constraints and only secondarily by acoustic aspects of the speech signal.


doi: 10.21437/ICSLP.2000-651

Cite as: Weber, A. (2000) Phonotactic and acoustic cues for word segmentation in English. Proc. 6th International Conference on Spoken Language Processing (ICSLP 2000), vol. 3, 782-785, doi: 10.21437/ICSLP.2000-651

@inproceedings{weber00c_icslp,
  author={Andrea Weber},
  title={{Phonotactic and acoustic cues for word segmentation in English}},
  year=2000,
  booktitle={Proc. 6th International Conference on Spoken Language Processing (ICSLP 2000)},
  pages={vol. 3, 782-785},
  doi={10.21437/ICSLP.2000-651}
}