TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of prosody and voice quality in text-dependent categories of storytelling across languages
AU - Montaño, Raúl
AU - Alías, Francesc
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2015 ISCA.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - In contrast to full-blown emotions, storytelling speech entails a particular speaking style that contains subtle expressive nuances of which little is known. In the present work, we study the role of prosody and voice quality while searching for crosslinguistic acoustic similarities in two categories of storytelling speech that are defined by their lexical components: The descriptive mode and sentences that specify a character intervention, together with a third neutral category (perceptually validated as reference). The study addresses four narrators using four different European languages (English, French, German and Spanish) expressing the same story. After conducting several statistical and discriminant analyses, we find that all narrators under analysis exploit some acoustic parameters in a similar way to differentiate among the analysed storytelling categories. Specifically, we observe that three prosodic features (mean fundamental frequency, mean intensity and number of silent pauses) and two voice quality parameters (mean Harmonic-to-Noise Ratio and Maxima Dispersion Quotient) explain a relatively similar proportion of the variance among storytelling categories in all languages. Moreover, the classification results obtained from the discriminant analysis are comparable for the three considered storytelling categories across languages.
AB - In contrast to full-blown emotions, storytelling speech entails a particular speaking style that contains subtle expressive nuances of which little is known. In the present work, we study the role of prosody and voice quality while searching for crosslinguistic acoustic similarities in two categories of storytelling speech that are defined by their lexical components: The descriptive mode and sentences that specify a character intervention, together with a third neutral category (perceptually validated as reference). The study addresses four narrators using four different European languages (English, French, German and Spanish) expressing the same story. After conducting several statistical and discriminant analyses, we find that all narrators under analysis exploit some acoustic parameters in a similar way to differentiate among the analysed storytelling categories. Specifically, we observe that three prosodic features (mean fundamental frequency, mean intensity and number of silent pauses) and two voice quality parameters (mean Harmonic-to-Noise Ratio and Maxima Dispersion Quotient) explain a relatively similar proportion of the variance among storytelling categories in all languages. Moreover, the classification results obtained from the discriminant analysis are comparable for the three considered storytelling categories across languages.
KW - Cross-language
KW - Prosody
KW - Speech analysis
KW - Storytelling
KW - Voice quality
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84959166087&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:84959166087
SN - 2308-457X
VL - 2015-January
SP - 1186
EP - 1190
JO - Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association, INTERSPEECH
JF - Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association, INTERSPEECH
T2 - 16th Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association, INTERSPEECH 2015
Y2 - 6 September 2015 through 10 September 2015
ER -