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Kaimaki, Marianna – Language and Speech, 2012
Results arising from a prosodic and interactional study of the organization of everyday talk in English suggest that news receipts can be grouped into two categories: valenced (e.g., "oh good") and non-valenced (e.g., "oh really"). In-depth investigation of both valenced and non-valenced news receipts shows that differences in their prosodic…
Descriptors: Suprasegmentals, Intonation, Phonetics, Phonology
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Gorisch, Jan; Wells, Bill; Brown, Guy J. – Language and Speech, 2012
In order to explore the influence of context on the phonetic design of talk-in-interaction, we investigated the pitch characteristics of short turns (insertions) that are produced by one speaker between turns from another speaker. We investigated the hypothesis that the speaker of the insertion designs her turn as a pitch match to the prior turn…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Intonation, Context Effect, Phonetics
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Walker, Gareth – Language and Speech, 2012
The empirical focus of this paper is a conversational turn-taking phenomenon in which conjunctions produced immediately after a point of possible syntactic and pragmatic completion are treated by co-participants as points of possible completion and transition relevance. The data for this study are audio-video recordings of 5 unscripted…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Speech Communication, Pragmatics, Syntax
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de Mareuil, Philippe Boula; Rilliard, Albert; Allauzen, Alexandre – Language and Speech, 2012
This study focuses on prosodic evolution in the French news announcer style, based on acoustic and perceptual analysis of French audiovisual archives. A 10-hour corpus covering six decades of broadcast news is investigated automatically. Two prosodic features, which may give an impression of emphatic style, are explored: word-initial stress and…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Suprasegmentals, Vowels, French
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Baumann, Stefan; Schumacher, Petra B. – Language and Speech, 2012
The paper reports on a perception experiment in German that investigated the neuro-cognitive processing of information structural concepts and their prosodic marking using event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Experimental conditions controlled the information status (given vs. new) of referring and non-referring target expressions (nouns vs.…
Descriptors: Sentences, Speech Communication, Nouns, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Warner, Natasha; Otake, Takashi; Arai, Takayuki – Language and Speech, 2010
While listeners are recognizing words from the connected speech stream, they are also parsing information from the intonational contour. This contour may contain cues to word boundaries, particularly if a language has boundary tones that occur at a large proportion of word onsets. We investigate how useful the pitch rise at the beginning of an…
Descriptors: Cues, Word Recognition, Japanese, Intonation
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Lee, Chao-Yang – Language and Speech, 2007
Lexical tone languages make up the majority of all known languages of the world, but the role of tone in lexical processing remains unclear. In the present study, four form priming experiments examined the role of Mandarin tones in constraining lexical activation and the time course of the activation. When a prime and a target were related…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Mandarin Chinese, Languages, Language Processing
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Grabe, Esther; Kochanski, Greg; Coleman, John – Language and Speech, 2007
The mathematical models of intonation used in speech technology are often inaccessible to linguists. By the same token, phonological descriptions of intonation are rarely used by speech technologists, as they cannot be implemented directly in applications. Consequently, these research communities do not benefit much from each other's insights. In…
Descriptors: Sentences, Intonation, Phonology, Mathematical Models
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Asu, Eva Liina; Nolan, Francis – Language and Speech, 2007
In Estonian, as in a number of other languages, the nuclear pitch accent is often low and level. This paper presents two studies of this phenomenon. The first, a phonetic analysis of carefully structured read sentences shows that low accentuation can also spread to the prenuclear accents in an intonational phrase. The resulting sentence contours…
Descriptors: Sentences, Phonology, Phonetic Analysis, Finno Ugric Languages
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Welby, Pauline – Language and Speech, 2003
Examines predictions made by two theories of the relationship between pitch accent and focus. Evidence presented suggests that listeners are sensitive to a variety of factors that may affect the focus projection ability of pitch accents on one word to mark focus on a large constituent. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Intonation, Linguistic Theory, Pronunciation, Speech Communication
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Schegloff, Emanuel A. – Language and Speech, 1998
Approaches prosody as one set of resources and practices among many by which participants interactively produce conversation and other talk-in interaction, examining three episodes of conversation that exemplify different orders of organization in which prosodic practices may be implicated. Reflects on what is needed for students of conversation…
Descriptors: Intonation, Morphology (Languages), Speech Communication, Suprasegmentals
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Srinivasan, Ravindra J.; Massaro, Dominic W. – Language and Speech, 2003
Examined the processing of potential auditory and visual cues that differentiate statements from echoic questions. Found that both auditory and visual cues reliably conveyed statement and question intonation, were successfully synthesized, and generalized to other utterances. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, English, Intonation
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Caspers, Johanneke – Language and Speech, 1998
Investigated functional differences between the accent-lending rise followed by sustained level pitch (10) and combined accent-lending rise and final rise (12) in Dutch. Thirty individuals were presented with short utterances bearing either a 10 or 12 contour. Results indicated that 10 is not readily interpreted as a question, so 10 may help…
Descriptors: Dutch, Foreign Countries, Intonation, Morphology (Languages)
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Erickson, Donna; Fujimura, Osamu; Pardo, Bryan – Language and Speech, 1998
Examined mandibular correlates of prosodic control in nonread dialog exchange involving repeated corrections. Articulatory and acoustic data were collected from four American English speakers at an x-ray laboratory, measuring jaw opening. Results suggested a local and global use of the jaw-opening gesture to produce both linguistic or…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Facial Expressions, Intonation, Morphology (Languages)
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Peppe, Sue; Maxim, Jane; Wells, Bill – Language and Speech, 2000
Cross-speaker variability in the use of prosodic features in intonation was investigated through analysis of adult speakers of English from London, England, using a new prosodic test battery (PEPS). PEPS is designed to elicit information about how speakers use prosodic features to realize different types of linguistic and communicative functions…
Descriptors: Adults, English, Foreign Countries, Intonation
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