On the role of the late rise and the early fall in the turn-taking system of Dutch

The question posed in the present paper is whether subjects interpret a short utterance with a late non-prominent rise in pitch (LH%) as having a ‘go on’ function, prompting the current speaker to continue, whereas the same short utterance spoken with an accent-lending fall (H*L L%) is associated with finality, for example, with the answer to a yes-no question. A series of three perception experiments were run with natural data taken from Dutch Map Task dialogues. The results support the hypothesis that the LH% contour is associated with a ‘go on’ response, while the falling contour is associa... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Caspers, Johanneke
Dokumenttyp: Part of book or chapter of book
Erscheinungsdatum: 2004
Schlagwörter: Taalwetenschap
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27068089
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/295429

The question posed in the present paper is whether subjects interpret a short utterance with a late non-prominent rise in pitch (LH%) as having a ‘go on’ function, prompting the current speaker to continue, whereas the same short utterance spoken with an accent-lending fall (H*L L%) is associated with finality, for example, with the answer to a yes-no question. A series of three perception experiments were run with natural data taken from Dutch Map Task dialogues. The results support the hypothesis that the LH% contour is associated with a ‘go on’ response, while the falling contour is associated with the answer to a question. Furthermore, LH% is preferred over H*L L% in contexts leading to backchannel responses, while there is no preference for either contour in question contexts. Finally, the LH% contour is acceptable in both context types, whereas the accent-lending fall is unacceptable in backchannel contexts.