<div><p>Non-verbal communication has important implications for inter-individual relationships and negotiation success. However, to what extent humans can spontaneously use rhythm and prosody as a sole communication tool is largely unknown. We analysed human ability to resolve a conflict without verbal dialogs, independently of semantics. We invited pairs of subjects to communicate non-verbally using whistle sounds. Along with the production of more whistles, participants unwittingly used a subtle prosodic feature to compete over a resource (ice-cream scoops). Winners can be identified by their propensity to accentuate the first whistles blown when replying to their partner, compared to the following whistles. Naive listeners correctly iden...
Success of our cooperation with other people may depend on various factors: whether we have experien...
Traditionally, the study of linguistics has focussed on verbal communication. In the sense that ling...
In human–human communication, dialogue participants are continuously sending and receiving signals o...
Non-verbal communication has important implications for inter-individual relationships and negotiati...
Non-verbal communication has important implications for inter-individual relationships and negotiati...
<p>(a) Effect of conflict on whistle dialog. (b) Relation between the likelihood of winning a contes...
This paper addresses the role of prosodic and phonetic features in talk, focussing on how to identif...
In spoken dialogue analysis, the speech signal is a rich source of information. We explore in this p...
The claim that nonverbal cues provide more information than the linguistic content of a conversation...
Virtual agents are increasingly being used for communication training such as public speaking-, job ...
In this article we study the forms and functions of whistling in social interaction. Our analysis id...
In this article we study the forms and functions of whistling in social interaction. Our analysis id...
Prosodic features in spontaneous speech help disambiguate implied meaning not explicit in linguistic...
Action-theoretic views of language posit that the recognition of others’ intentions is key to succes...
International audienceOral communication is an interactive and situated activity. Vocal effort is st...
Success of our cooperation with other people may depend on various factors: whether we have experien...
Traditionally, the study of linguistics has focussed on verbal communication. In the sense that ling...
In human–human communication, dialogue participants are continuously sending and receiving signals o...
Non-verbal communication has important implications for inter-individual relationships and negotiati...
Non-verbal communication has important implications for inter-individual relationships and negotiati...
<p>(a) Effect of conflict on whistle dialog. (b) Relation between the likelihood of winning a contes...
This paper addresses the role of prosodic and phonetic features in talk, focussing on how to identif...
In spoken dialogue analysis, the speech signal is a rich source of information. We explore in this p...
The claim that nonverbal cues provide more information than the linguistic content of a conversation...
Virtual agents are increasingly being used for communication training such as public speaking-, job ...
In this article we study the forms and functions of whistling in social interaction. Our analysis id...
In this article we study the forms and functions of whistling in social interaction. Our analysis id...
Prosodic features in spontaneous speech help disambiguate implied meaning not explicit in linguistic...
Action-theoretic views of language posit that the recognition of others’ intentions is key to succes...
International audienceOral communication is an interactive and situated activity. Vocal effort is st...
Success of our cooperation with other people may depend on various factors: whether we have experien...
Traditionally, the study of linguistics has focussed on verbal communication. In the sense that ling...
In human–human communication, dialogue participants are continuously sending and receiving signals o...