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  1. Crossroads (CROS)
  2. Volume 14
  3. Volume 14, Issue 1, September 2007
  4. An approach for detecting prosodic phrase boundaries in spoken english
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Volume 16
Volume 15
Volume 14
Volume 14, Issue 4, June 2008
Volume 14, Issue 3, March 2008
Volume 14, Issue 2, December 2007
Volume 14, Issue 1, September 2007
Introduction
Second life and education
Planning and improvisation in software processes
Trends in real-time rendering
An approach for detecting prosodic phrase boundaries in spoken english
The student's guide to GDC
Adaptively ranking alerts generated from automated static analysis
Storage capacity comparison of neural network models for memory recall
Observations on teamwork strategies in the ACM international collegiate programming contest
Volume 13
Volume 12
Volume 11
Volume 10
Volume 9
Volume 8
Volume 7
Volume 6
Volume 5
Volume 4
Volume 3
Volume 2
Volume 1

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An approach for detecting prosodic phrase boundaries in spoken english

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Atwell, Eric Brierley, Claire
Abstract Prosodic phrasing is the means by which speakers of any given language break up an utterance into meaningful chunks. The term "prosody" itself refers to the tune or intonation of an utterance, and therefore prosodic phrases literally signal the end of one tune and the beginning of another. This study uses phrase break annotations in the Aix-MARSEC corpus of spoken English as a "gold standard" for measuring the degree of correspondence between prosodic phrases and the discrete syntactic grouping of prepositional phrases, where the latter is defined via a chunk parsing rule using nltk_lite's regular expression chunk parser. A three-way comparison is also introduced between the "gold standard" chunk parsing rule and human judgment in the form of intuitive predictions about phrasing. Results show that even with a discrete syntactic grouping and a small sample of text, problems may arise for this rule-based method due to uncategorical behavior in parts of speech. Lack of correspondence between intuitive prosodic phrases and corpus annotations highlights the optional nature of certain boundary types. Finally, there are clear indications, supported by corpus annotations, that significant prosodic phrase boundaries occur within sentences and not just at full stops.
Starting Page 1
Ending Page 11
Page Count 11
File Format PDF HTM / HTML
ISSN 15284972 15284980
DOI 10.1145/1349332.1349337
Journal Crossroads (CROS)
Volume Number 14
Issue Number 1
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 2003-03-01
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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