English

Which Prosodic Features Matter Most for Pragmatics?

Computation and Language 2024-08-26 v1 Sound Audio and Speech Processing

Abstract

We investigate which prosodic features matter most in conveying prosodic functions. We use the problem of predicting human perceptions of pragmatic similarity among utterance pairs to evaluate the utility of prosodic features of different types. We find, for example, that duration-related features are more important than pitch-related features, and that utterance-initial features are more important than utterance-final features. Further, failure analysis indicates that modeling using pitch features only often fails to handle important pragmatic functions, and suggests that several generally-neglected acoustic and prosodic features are pragmatically significant, including nasality and vibrato. These findings can guide future basic research in prosody, and suggest how to improve speech synthesis evaluation, among other applications.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2408.13240,
  title  = {Which Prosodic Features Matter Most for Pragmatics?},
  author = {Nigel G. Ward and Divette Marco and Olac Fuentes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.13240},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Submitted to ICASSP 2025. Audio illustrations available at https://www.cs.utep.edu/nigel/pros-prag/

R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:22:25.478Z