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DiSS 2001: Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
- ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop (ITRW) on Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech, DiSS 2001, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, August 29-31, 2001. ISCA 2001
Annotation and Disyluency Types
- Luis Javier Rodríguez, Inés Torres, Amparo Varona:
Annotation and analysis of disfluencies in a spontaneous speech corpus in Spanish. 1-4 - Robert Eklund:
Prolongations: A dark horse in the disfluency stable. 5-8
Production
- Peter Howell, James Au-Yeung:
Application of EXPLAN theory to spontaneous speech control. 9-12 - Nada Vasic, Frank Wijnen:
Stuttering and speech monitoring. 13-16 - Michiko Yoshida:
Repeated phoneme effect in Japanese speech errors. 17-20 - Sieb G. Nooteboom:
Different sources of lexical bias and overt self-corrections. 21-24 - Yasuharu Den:
Are word repetitions really intended by the speaker? 25-28 - Mandana Seyfeddinipur, Sotaro Kita:
Gesture as an indicator of early error detection in self-monitoring of speech. 29-32 - Laura Abou-Haidar:
Pauses in speech by French speakers with Down Syndrome. 33-36
Prosody and Phonetics
- Tapio Hokkanen:
Prosodic marking of self-repairs. 37-40 - Danielle Duez:
Acoustico-phonetic characteristics of filled pauses in spontaneous French speech: preliminary results. 41-44 - Klaus J. Kohler, Benno Peters, Thomas Wesener:
Interruption glottalization in German spontaneous speech. 45-48 - Nikolinka Nenova, Gina Joue, Ronan Reilly, Julie Carson-Berndsen:
Sound and function regularities in interjections. 49-52 - Richard Shillcock, Simon Kirby, Scott McDonald, Chris Brew:
Filled pauses and their status in the mental lexicon. 53-56
Human Perception and Comprehension
- Mária Gósy:
The double function of disfluency phenomena in spontaneous speech. 57-60 - Karl G. D. Bailey, Fernanda Ferreira:
Do non-word disfluencies affect syntactic parsing? 61-64 - Jan McAllister, Susan Cato-Symonds, Blake Johnson:
Listeners' ERP responses to false starts and repetitions in spontaneous speech. 65-68 - Jeanne-Marie Debaisieux, José Deulofeu:
Grammatically unacceptable utterances are communicatively accepted by native speakers, why are they ? 69-72
Computational Linguistics and ASR
- Jörg Spilker, Anton Batliner, Elmar Nöth:
How to repair speech repairs in an end-to-end system. 73-76 - Ben Hutchinson, Cécile Pereira:
Um, one large pizza. A preliminary study of disfluency modelling for improving ASR. 77-80
Disfluency as a General Cognitive Phenomenon
- Caroline L. Rieger:
Idiosyncratic fillers in the speech of bilinguals. 81-84 - Asa Wengelin:
Disfluencies in writing - are they like in speaking? 85-88 - Michiko Watanabe:
The usage of fillers at discourse segment boundaries in japanese lecture-style monologues. 89-92 - Robin J. Lickley:
Dialogue moves and disfluency rates. 93-96 - Ellen Gurman Bard, Robin J. Lickley, Matthew P. Aylett:
Is disfluency just difficulty? 97-100
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