“…From a pedagogical perspective, understanding the role of temporal features in L2 speech perception can yield valuable information for setting curricular objectives and enhancing L2 learners’ fluency in classroom language teaching. As oral fluency is a robust indicator of L2 oral proficiency (Baker–Smemoe et al., 2014; De Jong et al., 2013; Tavakoli, Nakatsuhara, & Hunter, 2020), listener‐based judgements of fluency also play a crucial role in language assessment contexts. Therefore, a better understanding of the association between speech characteristics and listener‐based judgements of fluency is of great importance for the development of research‐informed assessment rubrics, rater training, and automated scoring systems (see De Jong, 2018; Duijm, Schoonen, & Hulstijn, 2018; Ginther, Dimova, & Yang, 2010), which in turn has a substantial impact on high‐stakes proficiency tests.…”