| E. G. Bard and R. J. Lickley, "On not remembering disfluencies," in Proceedings of 5th EuroSpeech, 1997. |
....speech, the extent of the reparanda and editing terms must be determined, which we refer to as correcting the repair. Hearers seem to understand such speech effortlessly. In fact, they have difficulty recalling the location of the repair (Martin and Strange, 1968) and the words in the reparanda (Bard and Lickley, 1997). So, hearers must be detecting and correcting (determining the extent of the reparandum and editing term) repairs very early in processing the speech. In addition to making repairs, speakers also break their turns into intonational phrases, which are signaled through variations in the pitch ....
Bard, E. G. and R. J. Lickley. 1997. On not remembering disfluencies. In Proceedings of the 5th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology, pages 2855--2858.
No context found.
E. G. Bard and R. J. Lickley, "On not remembering disfluencies," in Proceedings of 5th EuroSpeech, 1997.
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