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Audiovisual prosody and verbal irony
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In: TDX (Tesis Doctorals en Xarxa) (2017)
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Is Mandarin Chinese a Truth-Based Language? Rejecting Responses to Negative Assertions and Questions
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Is there a universal answering strategy for rejecting negative propositions? Typological evidence on the use of prosody and gesture
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Is there a universal answering strategy for rejecting negative propositions? Typological evidence on the use of prosody and gesture
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La prosodia audiovisual de la ironía verbal: un estudio de caso
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In: Revista Española de Lingüística, ISSN 2254-8769, Año nº 45, Fasc. 1, 2015 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Percepción del habla), pags. 73-103 (2015)
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ClInt: a bilingual Spanish-Catalan spoken corpus of clinical interviews ; ClInt: un corpus oral bilingüe español-catalán de entrevistas clínicas
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ClInt: A bilingual Spanish-Catalan spoken corpus of clinical interviews
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Observing and producing pitch gestures facilitates the learning of Mandarin chinese tones and words
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Is mandarin chinese a truth-based language? Rejecting responses to negative assertions and questions
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A fine-grained analysis of the acoustic cues involved in verbal irony recognition in French
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Gestural codas pave the way to the understanding of verbal irony
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Is there a universal answering strategy for rejecting negative propositions? Typological evidence on the use of prosody and gesture
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Observing pitch gestures favors the learning of Spanish intonation by Mandarin speakers
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Prosody and gesture in the interpretation of yes-answers to negative yes/no-questions
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Abstract:
In this paper we investigate the role of prosody and gesture in the interpretation of yes-answers to negative yes/no-questions in Catalan, a language with a polarity-based system of confirmation/contradiction of negative yes/no-questions. Two rating experiments were conducted to test (i) whether yes-answers to negative yes/no-questions are perceived as ambiguous by Catalan speakers when prosody and gesture are not available (Experiment 1), and (ii) whether the interpretation of sí ‘yes’ as an answer to a negative yes/no-question is dependent on prosodic and gestural properties of the answer (Experiment 2). Our results show that yes always asserts a salient propositional discourse referent, which can be either p or ¬p. Intonation and gesture guide the interpretation of yes-answers to negative yes/no-questions in Catalan, and we show that a yes-answer with a marked intonation and gesture is to be interpreted as a denial or REJECT of a salient propositional discourse referent. ; This research has been funded by the following two research grants awarded by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (BFU2012-31995 and FFI2011-23356), and by two grants awarded by the Generalitat de Catalunya to both the Grup d’Estudis de Prosòdia (2009SGR-701) and the Centre de Lingüística Teòrica (2009SGR-1073). The fourth author also acknowledges an ICREA Acadèmia award.
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Keyword:
Ambiguity; Gesture; Negative yes/no-questions; Prosody; Yes-answers
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/tlr-2014-0016 http://hdl.handle.net/10230/26978
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