This paper presents an analysis of phoneme durations of emotional speech in two languages: Dutch and Korean. The analyzed corpus of emotional speech has been specifically developed for the purpose of cross-linguistic comparison, and is more balanced than any similar corpus available so far: a) it contains expressions by both Dutch and Korean actors and is based on judgments by both Dutch and Korean listeners; b) the same elicitation technique and recording procedure were used for recordings of both languages; and c) the phonetics of the carrier phrase were constructed to be permissible in both languages. The carefully controlled phonetic content of the carrier phrase allows for analysis of the role of specific phonetic features, such as pho...
This study investigates the occurrence of asymmetries in cross-linguistic recognition of emotion in ...
Although facial expressions are one of the most important ways of communication in human society, mo...
In several languages, filled pauses (i.e. uh, um) have been described as speaker-specific (e.g. Horv...
This paper presents an analysis of phoneme durations of emotional speech in two languages: Dutch and...
This paper presents the Demo / Kemo corpus of Dutch and Korean emotional speech. The corpus has been...
The voice is an important channel for emotional expression. Emotions are of- ten characterized by di...
This paper presents the Demo / Kemo corpus of Dutch and Korean emotional speech. The corpus has been...
This study investigates the occurrence of asymmetries in cross-linguistic recognition of emotion in ...
This study investigates the perception and production of emotional prosody by native and non-native ...
The present study investigated whether Korean English as a Foreign Language learners experience diff...
It has been claimed that tone language speakers use less F0 related cues in the production of verbal...
A computer-aided analysis of some 800 sentences taken from English into Korean simultaneous i...
This thesis investigates the following research questions: (1) Does Korean have a metrical structure...
This study reports experimental results on whether the acoustic realization of vocal emotions differ...
In the present paper, two linguistic aspects of emotion expression are studied in the form they are ...
This study investigates the occurrence of asymmetries in cross-linguistic recognition of emotion in ...
Although facial expressions are one of the most important ways of communication in human society, mo...
In several languages, filled pauses (i.e. uh, um) have been described as speaker-specific (e.g. Horv...
This paper presents an analysis of phoneme durations of emotional speech in two languages: Dutch and...
This paper presents the Demo / Kemo corpus of Dutch and Korean emotional speech. The corpus has been...
The voice is an important channel for emotional expression. Emotions are of- ten characterized by di...
This paper presents the Demo / Kemo corpus of Dutch and Korean emotional speech. The corpus has been...
This study investigates the occurrence of asymmetries in cross-linguistic recognition of emotion in ...
This study investigates the perception and production of emotional prosody by native and non-native ...
The present study investigated whether Korean English as a Foreign Language learners experience diff...
It has been claimed that tone language speakers use less F0 related cues in the production of verbal...
A computer-aided analysis of some 800 sentences taken from English into Korean simultaneous i...
This thesis investigates the following research questions: (1) Does Korean have a metrical structure...
This study reports experimental results on whether the acoustic realization of vocal emotions differ...
In the present paper, two linguistic aspects of emotion expression are studied in the form they are ...
This study investigates the occurrence of asymmetries in cross-linguistic recognition of emotion in ...
Although facial expressions are one of the most important ways of communication in human society, mo...
In several languages, filled pauses (i.e. uh, um) have been described as speaker-specific (e.g. Horv...