Speech Prosody 2014 2014
DOI: 10.21437/speechprosody.2014-58
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The influence of accentuation and onset complexity on gestural timing within syllables

Abstract: There is an increasing consensus to regard gesture and speech as parts of an integrated communication system, in part because of the findings related to their temporal coordination at different levels. In general, results for different types of gestures show that the most prominent part of the gesture (the apex) is typically aligned with accented syllables [6, 10-12, 14, 17]. The aim of the present study is to test for this coordination by focusing on head movements taken from a semi-spontaneous setting in ord… Show more

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“… Zeller et al (2016) found in a corpus study of Swedish that when a speaker continues speaking after a discourse boundary, acoustic segments preceding the boundary are longer than for other types of discourse boundaries when the accompanying gesture phase is static (i.e., the hands are in a motionless phase of a gesture) but not when the accompanying gesture phase is dynamic. 3 Finally, two studies on Catalan found that stress and boundary position have an effect on the timing of the gesture apex (i.e., a gesture’s displacement maximum) for pointing gestures ( Esteve-Gibert & Prieto, 2013 ) and for head nods ( Esteve-Gibert et al, 2014 ), thus showing that body gestures, similar to prominence, are affected by prosodic boundaries and are coordinated both with boundaries and with prominence. Together, these studies provide evidence of a relationship between body gestures and prosodic boundaries.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… Zeller et al (2016) found in a corpus study of Swedish that when a speaker continues speaking after a discourse boundary, acoustic segments preceding the boundary are longer than for other types of discourse boundaries when the accompanying gesture phase is static (i.e., the hands are in a motionless phase of a gesture) but not when the accompanying gesture phase is dynamic. 3 Finally, two studies on Catalan found that stress and boundary position have an effect on the timing of the gesture apex (i.e., a gesture’s displacement maximum) for pointing gestures ( Esteve-Gibert & Prieto, 2013 ) and for head nods ( Esteve-Gibert et al, 2014 ), thus showing that body gestures, similar to prominence, are affected by prosodic boundaries and are coordinated both with boundaries and with prominence. Together, these studies provide evidence of a relationship between body gestures and prosodic boundaries.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%