We use a corpus of spontaneous interview speech to investigate the relationship between the distributional and prosodic characteristics of silent and filled pauses and the intent of an interviewee to deceive an interviewer. Our data suggest that the use of pauses correlates more with truthful than with deceptive speech, and that prosodic features extracted from filled pauses themselves as well as features describing contextual prosodic information in the vicinity of filled pauses may facilitate the detection of deceit in speech. 1
Previous research into speaker disfluency has indicated that filled pauses may fulfil a communicativ...
Four experiments examined whether variations in response latencies to a speaker’s query can be used ...
Filled pauses as, e.g., uh, eh, signal disfluencies, i.e. hesitations or repairs. They do normally n...
We use a corpus of spontaneous interview speech to investigate the relationship between the distribu...
The idea of detecting deception from speech is very attractive from a law enforcement perspective, y...
To date, studies of deceptive speech have largely been confined to descriptive studies and observati...
During public presentations or interviews, speakers commonly and unconsciously abuse interjections o...
The perception of silent pauses in continuous speech was investigated experimentally in three genres...
Naturally produced discourse is often different to that used in many psycholinguistic studies in tha...
Purpose: Communication is as much persuasion as it is the transfer of information. This creates a te...
We investigate the pitch characteristics of filled pauses in order to distinguish between hesitatio...
In this paper, we investigate the effect of filled pauses, a discourse marker and silent pauses in a...
This study examined the nature of deceptive vocal behavior in interactive situations. It compared th...
The 3rd International Symposium on Linguistic Patterns in Spontaneous Speech (LPSS2019), Institute o...
Corpus based studies of spontaneous speech showed that filled pauses tended to precede relatively lo...
Previous research into speaker disfluency has indicated that filled pauses may fulfil a communicativ...
Four experiments examined whether variations in response latencies to a speaker’s query can be used ...
Filled pauses as, e.g., uh, eh, signal disfluencies, i.e. hesitations or repairs. They do normally n...
We use a corpus of spontaneous interview speech to investigate the relationship between the distribu...
The idea of detecting deception from speech is very attractive from a law enforcement perspective, y...
To date, studies of deceptive speech have largely been confined to descriptive studies and observati...
During public presentations or interviews, speakers commonly and unconsciously abuse interjections o...
The perception of silent pauses in continuous speech was investigated experimentally in three genres...
Naturally produced discourse is often different to that used in many psycholinguistic studies in tha...
Purpose: Communication is as much persuasion as it is the transfer of information. This creates a te...
We investigate the pitch characteristics of filled pauses in order to distinguish between hesitatio...
In this paper, we investigate the effect of filled pauses, a discourse marker and silent pauses in a...
This study examined the nature of deceptive vocal behavior in interactive situations. It compared th...
The 3rd International Symposium on Linguistic Patterns in Spontaneous Speech (LPSS2019), Institute o...
Corpus based studies of spontaneous speech showed that filled pauses tended to precede relatively lo...
Previous research into speaker disfluency has indicated that filled pauses may fulfil a communicativ...
Four experiments examined whether variations in response latencies to a speaker’s query can be used ...
Filled pauses as, e.g., uh, eh, signal disfluencies, i.e. hesitations or repairs. They do normally n...