Abstract

Conversations play an important role in our daily life. During conversations, we usually talk from topic to topic automatically, smoothly and effortlessly. However, there are sometimes difficulties experienced in establishing and also acknowledging a new topic in an ongoing conversation. This fact shows that there are specific features and mechanisms to both producing and perceiving topic change, which play a prominent role in keeping continuous talk. The present study provides a multimodal analysis of the occurrence of topic shift in dyadic conversations which were recorded both for audio and video. The research was carried out on two stages, studying both visual and prosodic features of topic shift. On the first stage, the actual speakers gaze movements around topic shift were investigated while on the second stage, prosodic features such as pitch movement and intensity surrounding topic shift were measured. We wanted to know whether any of these features and their combination could be used as a cue to detect topic shift in a conversation. Focusing on detection and analysis of these features could be helpful for a better understanding of human-human as well as human-machine communication.

Highlights

  • Conversations are often characterized as having a certain topic or several topics [1]

  • Videotaped dialogues were used as the basis for this study

  • Using data from our dialogues, gaze behavior related to both topic shift and speaker change was investigated

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Conversations are often characterized as having a certain topic or several topics [1]. While moving from one topic to another is found to be very common in conversations, it is not considered as a random happening Instead, it is found in specific environments and in characteristic ways. There are some non-verbal communicative cues such as gestures, eye gaze, postures, head movements and a range of prosodic cues, such as pitch movement and intensity that lend naturalness to speech. These cues play an important role in human-human as well as in humanmachine communication. In order to fully understand, interpret and describe the structure of topic shift in conversation, studying non-verbal elements, both visual and acoustic, is considered to be crucial. To the best of our knowledge, having a multimodal approach towards investigating the occurrence of topic shift within conversation has considerable novelty

RELEVENT TERMINOLOGIES
Defining “Topic Shift” in Spoken Discourse
Defining “Prosody” in Spoken Discourse
MATERIAL AND METHOD
Technical Details
Relevant Gaze Annotation
Prosodic Annotation
Gaze Behavior and Topic Shift
Prosody and Topic Shift
SUMMARY
Full Text
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