In this study, we looked at speech rhythm in Finnish using the technique of synchronous speech developed by Cummins [1]. As predicted, synchronous reading resulted in a reduction of timing variation. The homogeneity achieved, however, did not necessarily represent average behavior, but often an extreme outside the range of performance in the solo reading. While the synchronous speech task was easy for speakers in general, there were clear differences in how difficult it was for speakers to synchronize their speech. These differences were not however related in an obvious way to differences between speakers themselves. It would appear that most of the work of synchrony was achieved at approximately the level of pause group; at finer levels speakers did not consistently adjust their timing to improve synchronization.
F. Cummins. Rhythm as entrainment: The case of synchronous speech. Journal of Phonetics, 37(1):16-28, 2009.
Cite as: O'Dell, M.L., Nieminen, T., Mustanoja, L. (2010) Assessing rhythmic differences with synchronous speech. Proc. Speech Prosody 2010, paper 141
@inproceedings{odell10_speechprosody, author={Michael L. O'Dell and Tommi Nieminen and Liisa Mustanoja}, title={{Assessing rhythmic differences with synchronous speech}}, year=2010, booktitle={Proc. Speech Prosody 2010}, pages={paper 141} }