Kessler, Brett, Rebecca Treiman & John Mullennix. 2002. Phonetic biases in voice key response time measurements. Journal of Memory and Language 47(1). 145–171. doi:10.1006/jmla.2001.2835

Abstract

Voice response time (RT) measurements from 4 large-scale studies of oral reading of English monosyllables were analysed for evidence that voice key measurements are biased by the leading phonemes of the response. Words with different initial phonemes did have significantly different RTs. This effect persisted after contributions of 9 covariables, such as frequency, length, and spelling consistency, were factored out, as well as when variance associated with error rate was factored out. A breakdown by phoneme showed that voiceless, posterior, and obstruent consonants were detected later than others. The second phonemes of the words also had an effect on RT: Words with high or front vowels were detected later. Phoneme-based biases due to voice keys were large (range about 100 ms) and pervasive enough to cause concern in interpreting voice RT measurements. Techniques are discussed for minimizing the impact of these biases.

Paper

Data

The following is the raw data that were analysed for the new study, KTM. It is subject-level data presented as comma-separated values, suitable for importation into most spreadsheets or statistics packages.

APA citation:

Kessler, B., Treiman, R., & Mullennix, J. (2002). Phonetic biases in voice key response time measurements. Journal of Memory and Language, 47, 145–171. doi:10.1006/jmla.2001.2835


Last change 2009-08-05T12:19:57-0500