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Intonation and Information Discourse and Dialogue CS359 October 16, 2001.

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Presentation on theme: "Intonation and Information Discourse and Dialogue CS359 October 16, 2001."— Presentation transcript:

1 Intonation and Information Discourse and Dialogue CS359 October 16, 2001

2 Beyond Contrast Specific information conveyed by intonation –New information = H* –Contrastive Information= L+H* General, compositional analysis of intonation –Pitch accent –Phrase accent –Boundary tone

3 Questions What sorts of information, extractable by current text analysis, are useful in accent/tune assignment? Can contrastive pronouns be unstressed? Why is relatively little known about H+L* accent? Synthesis is interesting, but are there systems that make use of pitch accent, phrasing, etc for recognition? What can they handle? How good are they?

4 Questions How do you evaluate synthesis systems? Speech recognition in general? The Bill/He contrasts could be recognized, but there’s nothing in the text or context to signal this. What sort of simple annotation is available to signal these facets? How universal/variable are these tune meanings?

5 Intonation & Information Intonational structure –Different domains of interpretation –Different information impact Indicates: –What speaker believes in mutually believed –What speaker wants to make mutually believed –How units are grouped for interpretation

6 Terminology Mutual belief: –I believe, You believe, I believe you believe, You believe I believe, I believe you believe I believe, etc……. “Predicated”: –Add THIS to your set of beliefs..

7 Pitch Accent Meaning: H* All pitch accents indicate salience Different accents –Different mutual belief, different predication H*: New information to be added to beliefs –With: L-L%, “neutral declarative” –With: H-H%, “high-rise”, inform+confirm –With: H-L%: elaboration –Establish information as mutually believed

8 Pitch Accent Meaning: L* Salient, but not new predicated information –With H-H%, yes-no question; confirmation –With L-H%, SHOULD be mutually believed –Cue phrases: “Now”,”Anyway” L*: discourse structure, topic change H*/complex: Usual semantic meaning

9 Pitch Accent Meaning: L+H Salience of scale: Link to other salient items L*+H: Uncertainty –Esp. with respect to scale –Greater pitch range -> Incredulity –“Lack of predication with respect to scale L+H*:Salience of scale+new information –Contrastive

10 Pitch Accent Meaning: H+L New information+link by inference to MB H*+L: –Pedagogical: Link new to old, instructions –Calling

11 Phrase Accent Meaning H or L over intermediate phrase –Presence or absence of boundary H: No boundary, exhaustive list L: Boundary, not exhaustive

12 Boundary Tone Meaning Spans entire phrase/utterance Discourse segmentation –H%: “continuation-rise” Interpret WITH subsequent utterance Internal to discourse segment –L%: Separate interpretation Likely END discourse segment

13 Tone, Tune, and Information Pitch accents: Salience and information status –H*: New, predicated info –L*: Salience, nothing to add to beliefs Phrase accent, boundary tone: –H-,H%: Continuation, forward linkage –L-,L%: Separation, no linkage


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