Prosodic Cues for Backchannels and Short Questions: Really?

Short questions can be ambiguous even after considering their preceding contexts. Hence, prosody may be useful for disambiguating different types of questions and their uses. For example, question bias has been linked to the presence of certain pitch accents. This paper presents a corpus study of very short questions and the contribution of prosodic cues to discourse disambiguation. This study focuses on backchannel questions which are by nature highly biased and yet sit between genuine questions and genuine backchannels. The study finds LDA and SVM classifiers do not perform better than random at separating backchannel and question really based on these prosodic cues. This means that, while intonation differs between broad categories of questions, theories that try to integrate prosodic cues with semantics and discourse require more than intonation, the final rise and the other usual prosodic suspects like duration and intensity.

[1]  Maribel Romero,et al.  On Negative Yes/No Questions , 2004 .

[2]  C. G. A. Harrison Rises and falls , 1993, Nature.

[3]  Andreas Stolcke,et al.  Can Prosody Aid the Automatic Classification of Dialog Acts in Conversational Speech? , 1998, Language and speech.

[4]  Dwight L. Bolinger,et al.  Intonation and Its Uses: Melody in Grammar and Discourse , 1989 .

[5]  Yasuharu Den,et al.  Prosody-based detection of the context of backchannel responses , 1998, ICSLP.

[6]  D. R. Ladd,et al.  A First Look at the Semantics and Pragmatics of Negative Questions and Tag Questions , 1981 .

[7]  M. Pickering,et al.  Toward a mechanistic psychology of dialogue , 2004, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[8]  Julia Hirschberg,et al.  On the role of context and prosody in the interpretation of 'okay' , 2007, ACL 2007.

[9]  Daniel Jurafsky,et al.  Lexical, Prosodic, and Syntactic Cues for Dialog Acts , 1998 .

[10]  Julia Hirschberg,et al.  The Prosody of Backchannels in American English , 2007 .

[11]  M. Safarova Rises and Falls. Studies in the Semantics and Pragmatics of Intonation , 2001 .

[12]  Mark Steedman,et al.  Information Structure and the Syntax-Phonology Interface , 2000, Linguistic Inquiry.

[13]  R. Rooij,et al.  On Polar Questions , 2003 .

[14]  Maribel Romero Biased Yes/No Questions : The Role of VERUM , 2006 .

[15]  Brian Reese Bias in questions , 2007 .

[16]  J.J.M. Haan-van Ditzhuyzen Speaking of questions: an exploration of Dutch question intonation , 2001 .

[17]  B. Rosner,et al.  Loudness predicts prominence: fundamental frequency lends little. , 2005, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[18]  R. Hudson The Meaning of Questions. , 1975 .

[19]  Nigel G. Ward,et al.  Prosodic features which cue back-channel responses in English and Japanese , 2000 .

[20]  Julia Hirschberg,et al.  Detecting question-bearing turns in spoken tutorial dialogues , 2006, INTERSPEECH.