Citations
104 | Can prosody aid the automatic classification of dialog acts in conversational speech?” - Shriberg, Bates, et al. - 1998 |
63 | Predictability effects on durations of content and function words in conversational english.
- Bell, Brenier, et al.
- 2009
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...ing rate variations, and these variations are often indicative of cognitive state and information state, and relate to the words that have appeared and that are likely to appear (GoldmanEisler, 1967; =-=Bell et al., 2009-=-; Ward et al., 2011). The temporal relation between the occurrences of two words can be measured in various ways. One metric would be the time between onsets, A-E in the example. However since a word,... |
31 |
Speaking in time”,
- Clark
- 2002
(Show Context)
Citation Context ... been the word, although psycholinguists more commonly use the elapsed second, as a critical variable in studies of reactions, perceptions, and responses. For dialog, although time is of the essence (=-=Clark, 2002-=-), most researchers still tend to still work in terms of sequences of words, although there are notable exceptions, including (Bard et al., 2002; Boltz, 2005; Ji and Bilmes, 2004), and, non-quantitati... |
14 | Sequential temporal patterns and cognitive processes in speech. - Goldman-Eisler - 1967 |
12 | Multi-speaker language modeling. In:
- Ji, Bilmes
- 2004
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...hough time is of the essence (Clark, 2002), most researchers still tend to still work in terms of sequences of words, although there are notable exceptions, including (Bard et al., 2002; Boltz, 2005; =-=Ji and Bilmes, 2004-=-), and, non-quantitatively, many practitioners of Conversation Analysis methods. Existing methods for studying dialog dynamics are, however, far from suitable for general use, all having one or more w... |
10 | Modelling sub-utterance phenomena in spoken dialogue systems - Buss, Schlangen - 2010 |
9 | Prosodic and temporal features for language modeling for dialog
- Ward, Vega, et al.
- 2012
(Show Context)
Citation Context ..., and these variations are often indicative of cognitive state and information state, and relate to the words that have appeared and that are likely to appear (GoldmanEisler, 1967; Bell et al., 2009; =-=Ward et al., 2011-=-). The temporal relation between the occurrences of two words can be measured in various ways. One metric would be the time between onsets, A-E in the example. However since a word, once initiated, ca... |
7 |
Manually corrected Switchboard word alignments,
- ISIP
- 2003
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...word pairs or ngrams. In the tables and figures below, these R-ratios were computed over a 650K word subset of Switchboard, a corpus of unstructured two-party telephone conversations among strangers (=-=ISIP, 2003-=-). To test whether a R-ratio is significantly different from 1.0, the chi-squared test can be applied, where the null hypothesis is that the context word occurs in a certain bucket as often as expecte... |
3 |
Towards a psycholinguistics of dialogue: Defining reaction time and error rate in a dialogue corpus. In:
- Bard, Aylett, et al.
- 2002
(Show Context)
Citation Context ..., and responses. For dialog, although time is of the essence (Clark, 2002), most researchers still tend to still work in terms of sequences of words, although there are notable exceptions, including (=-=Bard et al., 2002-=-; Boltz, 2005; Ji and Bilmes, 2004), and, non-quantitatively, many practitioners of Conversation Analysis methods. Existing methods for studying dialog dynamics are, however, far from suitable for gen... |
3 | Temporal dimensions of conversational interaction: The role of response latencies and pauses in social impression formation
- Boltz
- 2003
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...r dialog, although time is of the essence (Clark, 2002), most researchers still tend to still work in terms of sequences of words, although there are notable exceptions, including (Bard et al., 2002; =-=Boltz, 2005-=-; Ji and Bilmes, 2004), and, non-quantitatively, many practitioners of Conversation Analysis methods. Existing methods for studying dialog dynamics are, however, far from suitable for general use, all... |