*equal contribution
#student author
Elinor Amit, Meyrav Shoham, Yael Steinhart, and Uriel Cohen Priva, Under Revision. Structure through numbers: How and why low-complexity numbers appeal to consumers. (bib)
@misc{AmitShohamInfo, author = {Amit, Elinor and Shoham, Meyrav and Steinhart, Yael and Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {Structure through Numbers: How and Why Low-Complexity Numbers Appeal to Consumers}, year = {Under Revision} }
Uriel Cohen Priva and Roey J. Gafter. The actuation of unstressed /a/-raising in modern hebrew. In Selected Papers from NWAV 51, volume 30.2 of Penn Working Papers in Linguistics. (bib)
@InProceedings{CohenPrivaGafter2024Penn, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Gafter, Roey J.}, title = {The actuation of unstressed /a/-raising in Modern Hebrew}, booktitle = {Selected Papers from {NWAV} 51}, year = {2024}, volume = {30.2}, series = {Penn Working Papers in Linguistics} }
Uriel Cohen Priva and Emily Strand. Schwa’s duration and acoustic position in American English. Journal of Phonetics, 96: 101198. (Open Access, bib)
@Article{CohenPrivaStrand2022VLenition, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Strand, Emily}, title = {Schwa's duration and acoustic position in {American English}}, journal = {Journal of Phonetics}, volume = {96}, doi = {10.1016/j.wocn.2022.101198}, year = {2023}, url = {http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/papers/CohenPriva_Strand_Schwa-Accepted.pdf}, pages = {101198}, note = {(\href{https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0095447022000730/pdfft?md5=da2c9c226cfb1d4764a37fb4cfe4790b&pid=1-s2.0-S0095447022000730-main.pdf}{Open Access})}, abstract = {Is American English schwa’s position determined solely by the context in which it appears? Do vowels neutralize to schwa when their duration is shorter? We address these two inter-related questions using the Buckeye corpus to study vowel behavior across multiple contexts of spontaneous speech. We find that all except tense high vowels shift to lower F1 values when their duration is relatively short, including lax high vowels and lexical schwas, rather than toward a mid-vowel position that schwa occupies when its duration is long. However, we also replicate the finding that schwa is more dependent on both context and duration than other vowels. The results are not consistent with the idea that schwa’s position is determined exclusively by the context in which it appears. However, schwa’s shift to higher F1 values when its duration is longer is not necessarily different from other vowels’ shift to higher F1 values when their duration is longer, making it unnecessary to argue that schwa’s mid-vowel properties are due to having a target in F1 terms.} }
Uriel Cohen Priva, Emily Strand, #Shiying Yang, #William Mizgerd, #Abigail Creighton, #Justin Bai, #Rebecca Mathew, #Allison Shao, #Jordan Schuster, and #Daniela Wiepert. The Cross-linguistic Phonological Frequencies (XPF) Corpus manual. Accessible online, https://cohenpr-xpf.github.io/XPF/manual/xpf_manual.pdf. (bib)
@Manual{XPF2021manual, author={Cohen Priva, Uriel and Strand, Emily and Yang, Shiying and Mizgerd, William and Creighton, Abigail and Bai, Justin and Mathew, Rebecca and Shao, Allison and Schuster, Jordan and Wiepert, Daniela}, title = {The Cross-linguistic Phonological Frequencies (XPF) Corpus manual}, year = {2021}, note = {Accessible online, \url{https://cohenpr-xpf.github.io/XPF/manual/xpf_manual.pdf}} }
*Uriel Cohen Priva and *Chelsea Sanker. Natural leaders: Some interlocutors elicit greater convergence across conversations and across characteristics. Cognitive Science, 44 (10): e12897. (preprint, download published version, bib, citations)
@article{CohenPrivaSanker2020Convergence, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Sanker, Chelsea}, title = {Natural Leaders: Some Interlocutors Elicit Greater Convergence Across Conversations and Across Characteristics}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, volume = {44}, number = {10}, pages = {e12897}, keywords = {Convergence, Consistency, Corpus study, Individual differences, Interlocutor effects, Cross-characteristic, Social mediation}, doi = {10.1111/cogs.12897}, note = {(\href{https://psyarxiv.com/8zsh5/}{preprint}, \href{https://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/papers/CohenPriva_Sanker-Cognitive_Science-Natural_Leaders.pdf}{download published version})}, year = {2020}, url = {https://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/papers/CohenPriva_Sanker-Cognitive_Science-Natural_Leaders.pdf}, abstract = {Are there individual tendencies in convergence, such that some speakers consistently converge more than others? Similarly, are there natural “leaders,” speakers with whom others converge more? Are such tendencies consistent across different linguistic characteristics? We use the Switchboard Corpus to perform a large-scale convergence study of speakers in multiple conversations with different interlocutors, across six linguistic characteristics. Because each speaker participated in several conversations, it is possible to look for individual differences in speakers' likelihood of converging and interlocutors' likelihood of eliciting convergence. We only find evidence for individual differences by interlocutor, not by speaker: There are natural leaders of convergence, who elicit more convergence than others across characteristics and across conversations. The lack of similar evidence for speakers who converge more than others suggests that social factors have a stronger effect in mediating convergence than putative individual tendencies in producing convergence, or that such tendencies are characteristic-specific.}, }
Uriel Cohen Priva and Emily Gleason. The causal structure of lenition: A case for the causal precedence of durational shortening. Language, 96 (2): 413–448. (open access, bib, citations)
@Article{CohenPrivaGleason2020Lenition, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Gleason, Emily}, title = {The causal structure of lenition: A case for the causal precedence of durational shortening}, shorttitle = {The causal structure of lenition}, note = {(\href{https://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva_Gleason-2020-Language.html}{open access})}, url = {https://www.linguisticsociety.org/sites/default/files/05_93.3CohenPriva.pdf}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1353/lan.2020.0025}, pages = {413--448}, number = {2}, volume = {96}, journal = {Language}, }
Uriel Cohen Priva, #Shiying Yang, and Emily Strand. The stability of segmental properties across genre and corpus types in low-resource languages. In SCiL proceedings. Society for Computation in Linguistics. (bib)
@inproceedings{CohenPrivaYangStrand2020Stability, booktitle = {{SCiL} proceedings}, vol = {3}, organization = {Society for Computation in Linguistics}, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Yang, Shiying and Strand, Emily}, title = {The stability of segmental properties across genre and corpus types in low-resource languages}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.7275/fttf-fq95}, }
*Uriel Cohen Priva and *Chelsea Sanker. Limitations of difference-in-difference for measuring convergence. Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology, 10 (1): 15. (bib, citations)
@article{CohenPrivaSanker2019did, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Sanker, Chelsea}, title = {Limitations of difference-in-difference for measuring convergence}, doi = {10.5334/labphon.200}, volume={10}, number={1}, journal={Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology}, publisher={Ubiquity Press, Ltd.}, year={2019}, month={Sep}, pages={15}, abstract = {Linguistic convergence is the phenomenon in which interlocutors’ speech characteristics become more similar to each other’s. One of the methods frequently used to measure convergence is the difference-in-difference (DID) approach, comparing change in absolute distance between a subject and an interlocutor or model talker. We show that this approach is not a reliable measure of convergence when the starting values of the subject and the interlocutor or model talker are close, which can result in the measurement of apparent divergence, while extreme starting points can result in overestimation of convergence. These biases are of particular concern in studies that look for individual differences in convergence. We propose an alternative approach, linear combination, which does not have the same biases, and demonstrate the advantages of this method using data from convergence studies of four linguistic characteristics and simulated data.} }
#Jie Ren, Uriel Cohen Priva, and James L. Morgan. Underspecification in infants’ and adults’ lexical representations. Cognition, 193: 103991. (preprint, bib)
@article{RenEtAl2019Underspecification, title = {Underspecification in Infants' and Adults' Lexical Representations}, journal = {Cognition}, doi = {10.1016/j.cognition.2019.06.003}, year = {2019}, pages = {103991}, note = {(\href{https://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/papers/RenCohenPrivaMorgan-underspecification.pdf}{preprint})}, volume={193}, publisher={Elsevier BV}, author={Ren, Jie and Cohen Priva, Uriel and Morgan, James L.}, month={Dec}, keywords={Lexical representation, Developmental continuity, Mispronunciation processing, Phonological details, Underspecification}, abstract={Recent research has shown that toddlers’ lexical representations are phonologically detailed, quantitatively much like those of adults. Studies in this article explore whether toddlers’ and adults’ lexical representations are qualitatively similar. Psycholinguistic claims (Lahiri & Marslen-Wilson, 1991; Lahiri & Reetz, 2002, 2010) based on underspecification (Kiparsky, 1982 et seq.) predict asymmetrical judgments in lexical processing tasks; these have been supported in some psycholinguistic research showing that participants are more sensitive to noncoronal-to-coronal (pop → top) than to coronal-to-noncoronal (top → pop) changes or mispronunciations. Three experiments using on-line visual world procedures showed that 19-month-olds and adults displayed sensitivities to both noncoronal-to-coronal and coronal-to-noncoronal mispronunciations of familiar words. No hints of any asymmetries were observed for either age group. There thus appears to be considerable developmental continuity in the nature of early and mature lexical representations. Discrepancies between the current findings and those of previous studies appear to be due to methodological differences that cast doubt on the validity of claims of psycholinguistic support for lexical underspecification.} }
Elinor Amit, SoYon Rim, Georg Halbeisen, Uriel Cohen Priva, Elena Stephan, and Yaacov Trope. Distance-dependent memory for pictures and words. Journal of Memory and Language, 105: 119–130. (preprint, bib, citations)
@article{Amit2019Memory, title={Distance-dependent memory for pictures and words}, volume={105}, DOI={10.1016/j.jml.2019.01.001}, journal={Journal of Memory and Language}, publisher={Elsevier BV}, author={Amit, Elinor and Rim, SoYon and Halbeisen, Georg and Cohen Priva, Uriel and Stephan, Elena and Trope, Yaacov}, year={2019}, month={Apr}, pages={119--130}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/papers/Amit-etal-JML-2019-preprint.pdf}{preprint})} }
#Babak Hemmatian, #Sabina J Sloman, Uriel Cohen Priva, and Steven A Sloman. Think of the consequences: A decade of discourse about same-sex marriage. Behavior Research Methods. (bib, citations)
@article{Babak2019Sloman, journal = {Behavior Research Methods}, year = {2019}, title={Think of the Consequences: A Decade of Discourse About Same-Sex Marriage}, volumte={51}, issue={4}, page={1565--1585}, publisher={Springer Nature}, doi={10.3758/s13428-019-01215-3}, author={Hemmatian, Babak and Sloman, Sabina J and Cohen Priva, Uriel and Sloman, Steven A}, abstract={ Approaching issues through the lens of nonnegotiable values increases the perceived intractability of debate (Baron & Spranca in Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 70, 1–16, 1997), while focusing on the concrete consequences of policies instead results in the moderation of extreme opinions (Fernbach, Rogers, Fox, & Sloman in Psychological Science, 24, 939–946, 2013) and a greater likelihood of conflict resolution (Baron & Leshner in Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 6, 183–194, 2000). Using comments on the popular social media platform Reddit from January 2006 until September 2017, we showed how changes in the framing of same-sex marriage in public discourse relate to changes in public opinion. We used a topic model to show that the contributions of certain protected-values-based topics to the debate (religious arguments and freedom of opinion) increased prior to the emergence of a public consensus in support of same-sex marriage (Gallup, 2017), and declined afterward. In contrast, the discussion of certain consequentialist topics (the impact of politicians’ stance and same-sex marriage as a matter of policy) showed the opposite pattern. Our results reinforce the meaningfulness of protected values and consequentialism as relevant dimensions for describing public discourse and highlight the usefulness of unsupervised machine-learning methods in tackling questions about social attitude change. } }
Uriel Cohen Priva and Emily Gleason. The role of fast speech in sound change. In Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 1512–1517, Austin, TX. Cognitive Science Society. (pdf, bib)
@InProceedings{CohenPrivaGleason2018Cogsci, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Gleason, Emily}, title = {The role of fast speech in sound change}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society}, year = {2018}, editor = {}, pages = {1512--1517}, address = {Austin, TX}, organization = {Cognitive Science Society}, url = {http://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2018/papers/0293/index.html}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva_Gleason-2018-CogSci.html}{pdf})}, abstract = {Recent research has seen a surge in interest in the role of the individual in sound change processes. Do fast speakers have a unique role in sound change processes? Fast speech leads to greater rates of lenition (reduction) processes. But should it mean that fast talkers would be more likely to lenite even when speaking slowly? In two corpus studies we show that even when fast talkers speak more slowly they are (a) more likely to omit segments and (b) more likely to perform variable reduction of consonants. This draws attention to habitual speech rate as a likely cause in the actuation of lenition processes.} }
*Uriel Cohen Priva and *Chelsea Sanker. Distinct behaviors in convergence across measures. In Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 1518–1523, Austin, TX. Cognitive Science Society. (pdf, bib)
@InProceedings{CohenPrivaSanker2018Cogsci, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Sanker, Chelsea}, title = {Distinct behaviors in convergence across measures}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society}, year = {2018}, editor = {}, pages = {1518--1523}, address = {Austin, TX}, organization = {Cognitive Science Society}, url = {http://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2018/papers/0294/index.html}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva_Sanker-2018-CogSci.html}{pdf})}, abstract = {We present data on convergence in the Switchboard corpus, addressing diffindividualserences across measures and across speakers. We measured convergence in four characteristics, to test consistency in related and unrelated measures: F0 median, F0 variance, speech rate, and odds of the fillers _uh_ and _um_. Convergence was significant in all measures and exhibited variation both between and within individuals. Most notably, convergence in one measure was not predictive of convergence in other measures, except between closely related measures. The results demonstrate some of the limitations of generalizing convergence results from one measure to other measures.} }
#Shiying Yang, Chelsea Sanker, and Uriel Cohen Priva. The organization of lexicons: A cross-linguistic analysis of monosyllabic words. In SCiL proceedings, number 18. Society for Computation in Linguistics. (preprint, bib)
@InProceedings{YangSCiL2018, author = {Yang, Shiying and Sanker, Chelsea and Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {The organization of lexicons: A cross-linguistic analysis of monosyllabic words}, booktitle = {{SCiL} proceedings}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.7275/R58P5XPZ}, vol = {1}, number = {18}, organization = {Society for Computation in Linguistics}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/YangSankerCohenPriva-SCiL-Corrected.pdf}{preprint})} }
Uriel Cohen Priva and T. Florian Jaeger. The interdependence of frequency, predictability, and informativity in the segmental domain. Linguistics Vanguard, 4 (S2). (preprint, bib, citations)
@Article{CohenPrivaJaeger2018, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Jaeger, T. Florian}, title = {The interdependence of frequency, predictability, and informativity in the segmental domain}, journal = {Linguistics Vanguard}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1515/lingvan-2017-0028}, volume = {4}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva-Jaeger-2018.pdf}{preprint})}, number = {S2} }
Uriel Cohen Priva, #Lee Edelist, and Emily Gleason. Converging to the baseline: Corpus evidence for convergence in speech rate to interlocutor’s baseline. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 141 (5): 2989–2996. (preprint, bib, citations)
@Article{CohenPrivaEdelistGleason2017Convergence, title = {Converging to the baseline: {Corpus} evidence for convergence in speech rate to interlocutor's baseline}, volume = {141}, shorttitle = {Converging to the baseline}, doi = {10.1121/1.4982199}, abstract = {Speakers have been shown to alter their speech to resemble that of their conversational partner. Do speakers converge with their interlocutor's baseline, or does convergence stem from conversational properties that similarly affect both parties? Using the Switchboard corpus, this paper shows evidence for speakers' convergence in speech rate to the other party's baseline, not only to conversation-specific properties. Study 1 shows that the method for calculating speech rate used in this paper is powerful enough to replicate established findings. Study 2 demonstrates that speakers are mostly affected by their own behavior in other contexts, but that they also converge to their interlocutor's baseline, established using the interlocutor's behavior in other contexts. Study 2 also shows that speakers change their speech rate in response to the interlocutor's characteristics: speakers speak more slowly with older speakers regardless of the interlocutor's speech rate, and male speakers speak faster with other male speakers.}, number = {5}, journal = {The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America}, month = may, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Edelist, Lee and Gleason, Emily}, year = {2017}, pages = {2989--2996}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva_Edelist_Gleason-Converging_to_the_baseline-accepted.pdf}{preprint})} }
Uriel Cohen Priva. Not so fast: Fast speech correlates with lower lexical and structural information. Cognition, 160: 27–34. (preprint, bib, citations)
@Article{CohenPriva2017SpeechRate, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {Not so fast: Fast speech correlates with lower lexical and structural information}, journal = {Cognition}, volume = {160}, pages = {27--34}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1016/j.cognition.2016.12.002}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/Not_so_fast-accepted.pdf}{preprint})}, }
Uriel Cohen Priva. Informativity and the actuation of lenition. Language, 93 (3): 569–597. (open access, bib, citations)
@Article{CohenPriva2017LenitionActuation, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {Informativity and the actuation of lenition}, url = {https://muse.jhu.edu/article/669547}, note = {(\href{https://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva-2017-Language.html}{open access})}, journal = {Language}, volume = {93}, number = {3}, issue = {}, pages = {569--597}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1353/lan.2017.0037} }
Uriel Cohen Priva and Emily Gleason. Simpler structure for more informative words: a longitudinal study. In A. Papafragou, D. Grodner, D. Mirman, and J.C. Trueswell, editors, Proceedings of the 38th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 1895–1900, Austin, TX. Cognitive Science Society. (bib)
@InProceedings{CohenPrivaGleason2016Cogsci, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Gleason, Emily}, title = {Simpler structure for more informative words: a longitudinal study}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 38th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society}, year = {2016}, editor = {Papafragou, A. and Grodner, D. and Mirman, D. and Trueswell, J.C.}, pages = {1895--1900}, month = {August}, address = {Austin, TX}, organization = {Cognitive Science Society}, url = {https://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2016/papers/0331/index.html}, abstract = {As new concepts and discoveries accumulate over time, the amount of information available to speakers increases as well. One would expect that an utterance today would be more informative than an utterance 100 years ago (basing information on surprisal; Shannon 1948), given the increase in technology and scientific discoveries. This prediction, however, is at odds with recent theories regarding information in human language use, which suggest that speakers maintain a somewhat constant information rate over time. Using the Google Ngram corpus (Michel et al. 2011), we show for multiple languages that changes in lexical information (a unigram model) are actually negatively correlated with changes in structural information (a trigram model), supporting recent proposals on information theoretic constraints.} }
*Uriel Cohen Priva and *Joseph Austerweil. Analyzing the history of Cognition using topic models. Cognition, 135: 4–9. (preprint, bib, citations)
@article{CohenPrivaAusterweil2015, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel and Austerweil, Joseph}, title = {Analyzing the history of {C}ognition using topic models}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2015}, volume = {135}, doi = {10.1016/j.cognition.2014.11.006}, pages = {4--9}, note = {(\href{http://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPrivaAusterweil2015-preprint.pdf}{preprint})}, }
Uriel Cohen Priva. Informativity affects consonant duration and deletion rates. Laboratory Phonology, 6 (2): 243–278. (open access, bib, citations)
@article{CohenPriva2015LabPhon, title = {Informativity affects consonant duration and deletion rates}, volume = {6}, doi = {10.1515/lp-2015-0008}, abstract = {The duration and occasional deletion rate of consonants differ from one language to another. What causes a language to preserve and lengthen some consonants but shorten and delete others? I show that the typology of consonant duration and occasional deletion in American English is affected by consonants’ informativity – their average local predictability. Informativity can explain why usually-predictable segments such as American English /t/ are likely to be reduced even when they are locally unpredictable, but usually-predictable segments are preserved even when they are redundant. I use four corpus studies to demonstrate that higher informativity leads to longer duration and reduced likelihood to delete even when other important factors such as the phonetic features, frequency, and local predictability of consonants are controlled for. The role of informativity in the duration and deletion rates of consonants can bridge the gap between phonetic performance and the actuation of phonological processes.}, number = {2}, journal = {Laboratory Phonology}, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel}, month = may, year = {2015}, pages = {243--278}, note = {(\href{https://urielcpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/CohenPriva-2015-LabPhon.html}{open access})}, }
*Inbal Arnon and *Uriel Cohen Priva. Time and again: The changing effect of word and multiword frequency on phonetic duration for highly frequent sequences. The Mental Lexicon, 9 (3): 377–400. (preprint, bib, citations)
@article {ArnonCohenPriva2014MentalLexicon, author = {Arnon, Inbal and Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {Time and again: {T}he changing effect of word and multiword frequency on phonetic duration for highly frequent sequences}, journal = {The Mental Lexicon}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, year = {2014}, abstract = {There is growing evidence that multiword information affects processing. In this paper, we look at the effect of word and multiword frequency on the phonetic duration of words in spontaneous speech to (a) extend previous findings and (b) ask whether the relation between word and multiword information changes across the frequency continuum. If highly frequent sequences are stored holistically, then the effect of word frequency should disappear. If alternatively, increased sequence usage causes a change in the prominence of word and multiword information, we should see reduced effects of word frequency, and increased effects of sequence frequency for high frequency sequences. We first extend previous findings by showing that trigram frequency affects single word duration, even when controlling for word predictability. We then show that the effect of trigram frequency increases while the effect of word frequency decreases — but does not disappear — for highly frequent sequences. The findings provide further support for the effect of multiword information on processing and document the growing prominence of multiword information with repeated usage.}, pages = {377--400}, doi = {10.1075/ml.9.3.01arn}, keyword = {formulaic sequences, holistic storage, multiword frequency, phonetic duration, speech production, usage-based}, note = {(\href{http://arnonlanguagelab.huji.ac.il/images/arnon-cohen-priva-2014.pdf}{preprint})} }
*Inbal Arnon and *Uriel Cohen Priva. More than words: The effect of multi-word frequency and constituency on phonetic duration. Language and Speech, 56 (3): 349–371. (preprint, bib, citations)
@article{ArnonCohenPriva2013, author = {Arnon, Inbal and Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {More than Words: The Effect of Multi-word Frequency and Constituency on Phonetic Duration}, year = {2013}, doi = {10.1177/0023830913484891}, url = {http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0023830913484891}, journal = {Language and Speech}, volume = {56}, number = {3}, pages = {349--371}, note = {(\href{http://arnonlanguagelab.huji.ac.il/images/Arnon-CohenPriva-More_than_words.pdf}{preprint})}, abstract = { There is mounting evidence that language users are sensitive to the distributional properties of multi-word sequences. Such findings expand the range of information speakers are sensitive to and call for processing models that can represent larger chains of relations. In the current paper we investigate the effect of multi-word statistics on phonetic duration using a combination of experimental and corpus-based research. We ask (a) if phonetic duration is affected by multi-word frequency in both elicited and spontaneous speech, and (b) if syntactic constituency modulates the effect. We show that phonetic durations are reduced in higher frequency sequences, regardless of constituency: duration is shorter for more frequent sequences within and across syntactic boundaries. The effects are not reducible to the frequency of the individual words or substrings. These findings open up a novel set of questions about the interaction between surface distributions and higher order properties, and the resulting need (or lack thereof) to incorporate higher order properties into processing models. } }
Uriel Cohen Priva. Sign and signal: deriving linguistic generalizations from information utility. PhD thesis, Stanford University. (bib)
@PhdThesis{PhD, Title = {Sign and signal: deriving linguistic generalizations from information utility}, Author = {{Cohen Priva}, Uriel}, School = {Stanford University}, Year = {2012}, URL = {https://purl.stanford.edu/wg646gh4444} }
Uriel Cohen Priva. Constructing typing-time corpora: A new way to answer old questions. In S. Ohlsson and R. Catrambone, editors, Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pages 43–48, Austin, TX. Cognitive Science Society. (bib)
@InProceedings{CogSci2010, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel}, title = {Constructing typing-time corpora: {A} new way to answer old questions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society}, pages = {43--48}, year = {2010}, editor = {S. Ohlsson and R. Catrambone}, address = {Austin, TX}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Society}, url = {https://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2010/papers/0006/index.html} }
Uriel Cohen Priva. Using information content to predict phone deletion. In N. Abner and J. Bishop, editors, Proceedings of the 27th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics, pages 90–98, Somerville, MA, USA. Cascadilla Proceedings Project. (bib)
@InProceedings{WCCFL2008, title = {Using Information Content to Predict Phone Deletion}, pages = {90--98}, author = {Cohen Priva, Uriel}, key = {Cohen Priva, Uriel}, year = {2008}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 27th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics}, editor = {N. Abner and J. Bishop}, address = {Somerville, MA, USA}, publisher = {Cascadilla Proceedings Project}, url = {http://www.lingref.com/cpp/wccfl/27/abstract1820.html} }
test