Perception of prosodic social affects in Japanese: A free-labeling study
RILLIARD, Albert
Laboratoire d'Informatique pour la Mécanique et les Sciences de l'Ingénieur [LIMSI]
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Laboratoire d'Informatique pour la Mécanique et les Sciences de l'Ingénieur [LIMSI]
RILLIARD, Albert
Laboratoire d'Informatique pour la Mécanique et les Sciences de l'Ingénieur [LIMSI]
< Reduce
Laboratoire d'Informatique pour la Mécanique et les Sciences de l'Ingénieur [LIMSI]
Language
en
Communication dans un congrès avec actes
This item was published in
International Conference on Speech Prosody (SP 2016), 2016-05-31, Boston. 2016p. 811-815
ISCA
English Abstract
This paper presents an examination of the variable lexical labels used by listeners to identify 16 social affective expressions in Japanese language, in audiovisual presentations. A free-labeling task allows an open approach ...Read more >
This paper presents an examination of the variable lexical labels used by listeners to identify 16 social affective expressions in Japanese language, in audiovisual presentations. A free-labeling task allows an open approach to variability in the perception of social affects, that is constrained by pre-defined force-choice paradigms. 27 L1 Japanese listeners participated in the experiment. Subjects were asked to write down one word (noun or adjective) that best describes the intended expression they perceived from the speaker in each stimulus. Results cluster into coherent groups - relative to the expressions intended by the speakers. One Japanese-specific social affect, kyoshuku forms one cluster by itself among the 8 main clusters. This result emphasizes its specificity in Japanese culture: this expression was not singularized the same way by L1 French listeners from the same situation. The results also indicate the importance of a separation between assertive and dubitative speech acts in the meaning carried by prosody.Read less <
English Keywords
Japanese
multi-modal perception
social affects
free labeling
Origin
Hal imported