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Accenting, Givenness, and Syntactic Role. By E.G. Bard and M.P. Aylett Presented by David Vespe. Presentation Overview. Summary of authors’ work Authors’ results Analysis. Previous Work. Broadcast monologues, interviews Elicited descriptions What about spontaneous speech?. Main Idea.
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Accenting, Givenness, and Syntactic Role By E.G. Bard and M.P. Aylett Presented by David Vespe
Presentation Overview • Summary of authors’ work • Authors’ results • Analysis
Previous Work • Broadcast monologues, interviews • Elicited descriptions • What about spontaneous speech?
Main Idea • Compare repeated mentions: • In single task • Across many tasks
Test Setup • Directions given imaginary map • Speakers encouraged to “contribute fully”
Characteristics Examined • “Intelligibility Loss” • Accent • deaccented, reaccented • Structure • Conversational Move
Results • Within a single dialogue: • Just 18% of repeated words deaccented • For dialogues in general: • Second use of a word tends to be less intelligible, regardless of accent • Structure not significant for predicting deaccenting
Conclusions • Givenness does not imply deaccenting • Introduction of a term tends to maintain structure across dialogues; repeated mention does not • Controlled experiments don’t generalize to spontaneous speech
Observations • Results are for “Glaswegian Southern Scottish English” • Did their own labeling
Observations • Directions based on imaginary map • Everything is “new” • Penalty for bad directions may lead to overaccenting • Small numbers: • 48 cases of repetition across tasks • 3 of these are deaccented