Abstract is missing.
- Infant speech database for longitudinal analysis of spoken language developmentShigeaki Amano. 1 [doi]
- Disfluency as metacommunicationDale J. Barr. 2 [doi]
- LUCID: a corpus of spontaneous and read clear speech in British EnglishRachel Baker, Valérie Hazan. 3-6 [doi]
- Does reading clearly produce the same acoustic-phonetic modifications as spontaneous speech in a clear speaking style?Valérie Hazan, Rachel Baker. 7-10 [doi]
- Assessing sentence repetition and narrative speech data produced by hearing-impaired and normally hearing childrenShu-Chuan Tseng, Pei-Chen Tsou, Ko Kuei, Chien-Wen Lee. 11-14 [doi]
- Fluency in non-native read and spontaneous speechCatia Cucchiarini, Joost van Doremalen, Helmer Strik. 15-18 [doi]
- Periodic cycles of hesitation phenomena in spontaneous speechSandra Merlo, Plínio Almeida Barbosa. 19-22 [doi]
- The effect of directed and open disambiguation prompts in authentic call center data on the frequency and distribution of filled pauses and possible implications for filled pause hypotheses and data collection methodologyRobert Eklund. 23-26 [doi]
- ma-, and demonstrative-type fillersTakuya Kawada. 27-30 [doi]
- Utterance-initial elements in Japanese: a comparison among fillers, conjunctions, and topic phrasesMichiko Watanabe, Yasuharu Den. 31-34 [doi]
- Investigating the COG ratio as feature for speaker verification on high-effort speechCorinna Harwardt. 35-38 [doi]
- Contextual effects in recognizing reduced words in spontaneous speechShu-Chuan Tseng, Tzu-Lun Lee. 39-42 [doi]
- Phonological competition in casual speechAnne Cutler, Holger Mitterer, Susanne Brouwer, Annelie Tuinman. 43-46 [doi]
- Final lowering and boundary pitch movements in spontaneous JapaneseKikuo Maekawa. 47-50 [doi]
- An annotation scheme for syntactic unit in Japanese dialogTakehiko Maruyama, Katsuya Takanashi, Nao Yoshida. 51-54 [doi]
- Towards a precise model of turn-taking for conversation: a quantitative analysis of overlapped utterancesHanae Koiso, Yasuharu Den. 55-58 [doi]
- Salientizing the breaks in talk: a study of Japanese segmentizingEmi Morita. 59-62 [doi]
- Prosodic cues to engagement in non-lexical response tokens in SwedishJoakim Gustafson, Daniel Neiberg. 63-66 [doi]
- A socio-phonetic analysis of Taiwan Mandarin interview speechShu-Chuan Tseng, Yun-Ru Huang. 67-70 [doi]
- Gesture correction in childrenKazuki Sekine. 71-74 [doi]
- Meaning and use: a pragmatic and prosodic analysis of interjections in conversational speechLi-chiung Yang. 75-78 [doi]
- euh as cue for speaker confidence and word searching in human spoken answers in FrenchAnne Garcia-Fernandez, Ioana Vasilescu, Sophie Rosset. 79-80 [doi]
- Modeling conversational interaction using coupled Markov chainsDaniel Neiberg, Joakim Gustafson. 81-84 [doi]
- Voice activity detection based on combination of weighted sub-band features using auto-correlation functionKun-Ching Wang, Chiun-Li Chin, Yi-Hsing Tsai. 85-88 [doi]
- "um...i don't see any": the function of filled pauses and repairsHannele Nicholson, Kathleen M. Eberhard, Matthias Scheutz. 89-92 [doi]
- Pitch patterns in the vocalization of a 3-month-old taiwanese infantPei-Yu Hsieh. 93-96 [doi]
- Analysis of prosodic features for end-of-utterance prediction in spontaneous JapaneseYuichi Ishimoto, Mika Enomoto. 97-100 [doi]
- Hesitations in read vs. spontaneous French in a multi-genre corpusJean Philippe Goldman, Mathieu Avanzi, Antoine Auchlin. 101-104 [doi]
- Hesitation and uncertainty as feedbackKristiina Jokinen. 103-106 [doi]
- Autism and the use of fillers: differences between 'um' and 'uh'Rebecca Lunsford, Peter A. Heeman, Lois M. Black, Jan P. H. van Santen. 107-110 [doi]
- euh in interactive man-machine question answering dialogs in FrenchIoana Vasilescu, Sophie Rosset, Martine Adda-Decker. 111-114 [doi]
- Disfluency patterns in dialogue processingEtsuko Yoshida, Robin J. Lickley. 115-118 [doi]
- The influence of articulation rate, and the disfluency of others, on one's own speechIan Finlayson, Robin J. Lickley, Martin Corley. 119-122 [doi]