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Main Authors: Regev, Tamar I., Ohams, Chiebuka, Xie, Shaylee, Wolf, Lukas, Fedorenko, Evelina, Warstadt, Alex, Wilcox, Ethan G., Pimentel, Tiago
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.11630
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author Regev, Tamar I.
Ohams, Chiebuka
Xie, Shaylee
Wolf, Lukas
Fedorenko, Evelina
Warstadt, Alex
Wilcox, Ethan G.
Pimentel, Tiago
author_facet Regev, Tamar I.
Ohams, Chiebuka
Xie, Shaylee
Wolf, Lukas
Fedorenko, Evelina
Warstadt, Alex
Wilcox, Ethan G.
Pimentel, Tiago
contents In spoken communication, information is transmitted not only via words, but also through a rich array of non-verbal signals, including prosody--the non-segmental auditory features of speech. Do these different communication channels carry distinct information? Prior work has shown that the information carried by prosodic features is substantially redundant with that carried by the surrounding words. Here, we systematically examine the time scale of this relationship, studying how it varies with the length of past and future contexts. We find that a word's prosodic features require an extended past context (3-8 words across different features) to be reliably predicted. Given that long-scale contextual information decays in memory, prosody may facilitate communication by adding information that is locally unique. We also find that a word's prosodic features show some redundancy with future words, but only with a short scale of 1-2 words, consistent with reports of incremental short-term planning in language production. Thus, prosody may facilitate communication by helping listeners predict upcoming material. In tandem, our results highlight potentially distinct roles that prosody plays in facilitating integration of words into past contexts and in helping predict upcoming words.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_11630
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The time scale of redundancy between prosody and linguistic context
Regev, Tamar I.
Ohams, Chiebuka
Xie, Shaylee
Wolf, Lukas
Fedorenko, Evelina
Warstadt, Alex
Wilcox, Ethan G.
Pimentel, Tiago
Computation and Language
Information Theory
In spoken communication, information is transmitted not only via words, but also through a rich array of non-verbal signals, including prosody--the non-segmental auditory features of speech. Do these different communication channels carry distinct information? Prior work has shown that the information carried by prosodic features is substantially redundant with that carried by the surrounding words. Here, we systematically examine the time scale of this relationship, studying how it varies with the length of past and future contexts. We find that a word's prosodic features require an extended past context (3-8 words across different features) to be reliably predicted. Given that long-scale contextual information decays in memory, prosody may facilitate communication by adding information that is locally unique. We also find that a word's prosodic features show some redundancy with future words, but only with a short scale of 1-2 words, consistent with reports of incremental short-term planning in language production. Thus, prosody may facilitate communication by helping listeners predict upcoming material. In tandem, our results highlight potentially distinct roles that prosody plays in facilitating integration of words into past contexts and in helping predict upcoming words.
title The time scale of redundancy between prosody and linguistic context
topic Computation and Language
Information Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.11630