Franziska Margarete Schulz

Presentations

Displaying 1 - 6 of 6
  • Schulz, F. M., Corps, R. E., & Meyer, A. S. (2024). Who is a fluent speaker? Working memory might tell!. Talk presented at Psycholinguistics in Flanders (PiF 2024). Brussels, Belgium. 2024-05-27 - 2024-05-28.
  • Schulz, F. M., Corps, R. E., & Meyer, A. S. (2024). Who is a fluent speaker? Working memory might tell us!. Poster presented at the IMPRS Conference 2024, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
  • Schulz, F. M., Corps, R. E., & Meyer, A. S. (2023). Individual differences in the production of speech disfluencies. Poster presented at Psycholinguistics in Flanders (PiF 2023), Ghent, Belgium.
  • Schulz, F. M., Corps, R. E., & Meyer, A. S. (2023). Individual differences in the production of speech disfluencies. Poster presented at the 29th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference (AMLaP 2023), Donostia–San Sebastián, Spain.
  • Schulz, F. M., Corps, R. E., & Meyer, A. S. (2023). Individual differences in disfluency production. Poster presented at the 19th NVP Winter Conference on Brain and Cognition, Egmond aan Zee, The Netherlands.

    Abstract

    Producing spontaneous speech is challenging. It often contains disfluencies like repetitions, prolongations, silent pauses or filled pauses. Previous research has largely focused on the language-based factors (e.g., planning difficulties) underlying the production of these disfluencies. But research has also shown that some speakers are more disfluent than others. What cognitive mechanisms underlie this difference? We reanalyzed a behavioural dataset of 112 participants, who were assessed on a battery of tasks testing linguistic knowledge, processing speed, non-verbal IQ, working memory, and basic production skills and also produced six 1-minute samples of spontaneous speech (Hintz et al., 2020). We assessed the length and lexical diversity of participants’ speech and determined how often they produced silent pauses and filled pauses. We used network analysis, factor analysis and non-parametric regressions to investigate the relationship between these variables and individual differences in particular cognitive skills. We found that individual differences in linguistic knowledge or processing speed were not related to the production of disfluencies. In contrast, the proportion of filled pauses (relative to all words in the 1-minute narratives) correlated negatively with working memory capacity.
  • Schulz, F. M., Antolovic, K., Hejazi, Z., & Goral, M. (2022). Using a translanguaging framework to examine language production in a trilingual person with aphasia. Poster presented at the L3 Workshop 2022: Workshop on Multilingual Language Acquisition, Processing and Use, London, UK.

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