Cross-cultural Investigation of Prosody in Verbal Feedback in Interactional Rapport

被引:0
|
作者
Levow, Gina-Anne [1 ]
Duncan, Susan [2 ]
King, Edward T. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Chicago, Dept Comp Sci, Chicago, IL 60611 USA
[2] Univ Chicago, Dept Psychol, Chicago, IL 60611 USA
来源
11TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL SPEECH COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION 2010 (INTERSPEECH 2010), VOLS 1-2 | 2010年
关键词
rapport; multi-lingual analysis; vocal feedback; prosody; JAPANESE; CONVERSATION; ENGLISH;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Aspects of speech and non-verbal behavior allow conversational partners to establish and maintain rapport by signaling engagement or endorsement. In the verbal channel, these factors encompass requests for and production of vocal feedback, as well as lexical and grammatical mirroring. However, these cues are often subtle and culture-specific. Here, we present a preliminary investigation of the differences in elicitation and provision of vocal feedback across three diverse language/cultural groups: American English, Gulf/Iraqi Arabic, and Mexican Spanish. We describe our corpus of unrehearsed dyadic story-telling interactions, with listeners who had been instructed to be "active and engaged." Based on a fully-transcribed and aligned sub-corpus of 79 interactions, we identify fundamental contrasts in expectations for and production of vocal feedback. We identify dramatic differences in the rates of listener verbal feedback across the groups. However, we find that some significant pitch-related prosodic contrasts are robustly employed across these diverse groups, while we do find differences in the use of other pitch and intensity cues. These differences will inform the development of culturally-sensitive conversational agents, able to engage in more effective dialogue.
引用
收藏
页码:286 / +
页数:2
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] "'WE' AND 'THEY'": WHY MUST WE ENGAGE IN CROSS-CULTURAL CONVERSATION?
    Balslev, Anindita N.
    ZYGON, 2023, 58 (01): : 109 - 123
  • [42] Cross-cultural and inter-group research on emotion perception
    Fang, Xia
    Rychlowska, Magdalena
    Lange, Jens
    JOURNAL OF CULTURAL COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2022, 6 (01) : 1 - 7
  • [44] Syntactic complexity in a cross-cultural E-mail exchange
    Schenker, Theresa
    SYSTEM, 2016, 63 : 40 - 50
  • [45] Contribution of cross-cultural studies to understanding wine appreciation: A review
    Rodrigues, Heber
    Parr, Wendy V.
    FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL, 2019, 115 : 251 - 258
  • [46] Idioms as a Tool for Enhancing Professional Competence and Cross-Cultural Communication
    Quintero, Anamari Irizarry
    Villafane-Rodriguez, Camille
    Johnson, Robyn
    Clarke, Linda
    BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION QUARTERLY, 2024,
  • [47] Cross-cultural impact on financial companies online brand personality
    Shi, Xingsong
    Shan, Xiaohui
    MARKETING INTELLIGENCE & PLANNING, 2019, 37 (05) : 482 - 496
  • [48] Cross-cultural comparison of the neurobehavioral characteristics of Chinese and Japanese neonates
    Loo, KK
    Ohgi, S
    Zhu, H
    Howard, J
    Chen, LA
    PEDIATRICS INTERNATIONAL, 2005, 47 (04) : 446 - 451
  • [49] A cross-cultural analysis of the effect of language on perceived risk online
    Alcantara-Pilar, Juan Miguel
    del Barrio-Garcia, Salvador
    Porcu, Lucia
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2013, 29 (03) : 596 - 603
  • [50] Outgroup threat and the emergence of cohesive groups: A cross-cultural examination
    Lang, Martin
    Xygalatas, Dimitris
    Kavanagh, Christopher M.
    Boccardi, Natalia
    Halberstadt, Jamin
    Jackson, Chris
    Martinez, Mercedes
    Reddish, Paul
    Tong, Eddie M. W.
    Vazquez, Alexandra
    Whitehouse, Harvey
    Yamamoto, Maria Emilia
    Yuki, Masaki
    Gomez, Angel
    GROUP PROCESSES & INTERGROUP RELATIONS, 2022, 25 (07) : 1739 - 1759