We examine prosodic and contextual factors characterizing the backchannel function of single affirmative words. Data is drawn from collaborative task-oriented dialogues between speakers of Standard American English. Despite high lexical variability, backchannels are prosodically well defined: they have higher pitch and intensity and greater pitch slope than affirmative words expressing other pragmatic functions. Additionally, we identify phrase-final rising pitch as a salient trigger for backchanneling
Back-channel feedback is required in order to build spoken dialog systems that are responsive. This ...
As interactive voice response systems spread at a rapid pace, providing an increasingly more complex...
To participate effectively in interaction, interlocutors should make use of various resources such a...
We examine prosodic and contextual factors characterizing the backchannel function of single affirma...
We examine BACKCHANNEL-INVITING CUES — distinct prosodic, acoustic and lexical events in the speaker...
In conversation, when speech is followed by a backchannel, evidence of continued engagement by one’s...
We examine BACKCHANNEL-INVITING CUES — distinct prosodic, acoustic and lexical events in the speaker...
Dynamic modeling of spoken dialogue seeks to capture how interlocutors change their speech over the ...
What are backchannels? Backchannels can be generally defined as the intermittent vocal noises e.g. m...
Backchannels are a linguistic phenomenon that remains poorly defined. Borrowing of terminology and a...
This research investigated the backchannel usage of Japanese native speakers (JS) during English con...
This paper is about the use of back-channels in speakers of English as a second language. It is main...
Human-human interaction comes fluently, but HCI does not. We want to study Human behaviors for bette...
International audienceIn this study, we analyze the role of several linguistic cues (prosodic units,...
As interactive voice response systems spread at a rapid pace, providing an increasingly more complex...
Back-channel feedback is required in order to build spoken dialog systems that are responsive. This ...
As interactive voice response systems spread at a rapid pace, providing an increasingly more complex...
To participate effectively in interaction, interlocutors should make use of various resources such a...
We examine prosodic and contextual factors characterizing the backchannel function of single affirma...
We examine BACKCHANNEL-INVITING CUES — distinct prosodic, acoustic and lexical events in the speaker...
In conversation, when speech is followed by a backchannel, evidence of continued engagement by one’s...
We examine BACKCHANNEL-INVITING CUES — distinct prosodic, acoustic and lexical events in the speaker...
Dynamic modeling of spoken dialogue seeks to capture how interlocutors change their speech over the ...
What are backchannels? Backchannels can be generally defined as the intermittent vocal noises e.g. m...
Backchannels are a linguistic phenomenon that remains poorly defined. Borrowing of terminology and a...
This research investigated the backchannel usage of Japanese native speakers (JS) during English con...
This paper is about the use of back-channels in speakers of English as a second language. It is main...
Human-human interaction comes fluently, but HCI does not. We want to study Human behaviors for bette...
International audienceIn this study, we analyze the role of several linguistic cues (prosodic units,...
As interactive voice response systems spread at a rapid pace, providing an increasingly more complex...
Back-channel feedback is required in order to build spoken dialog systems that are responsive. This ...
As interactive voice response systems spread at a rapid pace, providing an increasingly more complex...
To participate effectively in interaction, interlocutors should make use of various resources such a...