Time-course of phonetic (motor speech) encoding in utterance production

Cogn Neuropsychol. 2023 Jul-Sep;40(5-6):287-297. doi: 10.1080/02643294.2023.2279739. Epub 2023 Nov 9.

Abstract

Speaking involves the preparation of the linguistic content of an utterance and of the motor programs leading to articulation. The temporal dynamics of linguistic versus motor-speech (phonetic) encoding is highly debated: phonetic encoding has been associated either to the last quarter of an utterance preparation time (∼150ms before articulation), or to virtually the entire planning time, simultaneously with linguistic encoding. We (i) review the evidence on the time-course of motor-speech encoding based on EEG/MEG event-related (ERP) studies and (ii) strive to replicate the early effects of phonological-phonetic factors in referential word production by reanalysing a large EEG/ERP dataset. The review indicates that motor-speech encoding is engaged during at least the last 300ms preceding articulation (about half of a word planning lag). By contrast, the very early involvement of phonological-phonetic factors could be replicated only partially and is not as robust as in the second half of the utterance planning time-window.

Keywords: ERP; Phonetic encoding; dynamics; motor speech planning; time-course.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Phonetics*
  • Speech*