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INTERSPEECH
2010

Detecting Politeness and efficiency in a cooperative social interaction

12 years 11 months ago
Detecting Politeness and efficiency in a cooperative social interaction
We developed a cooperative time-sensitive task to study vocal expression of politeness and efficiency. Sixteen dyads completed 20 trials of the `Maze Task', where one participant (the `navigator') gave oral instructions (mainly `up', `down', left', `right') for the other (the `pilot') to follow. For half of the trials, navigators were instructed to be polite, and for the other half to be efficient. The simplicity of the task left few ways to express politeness. Nevertheless it significantly affected task accuracy, and pilots' subjective ratings indicate that it was perceived. Efficiency was not as clearly perceived. Preliminary acoustic analysis suggests relevant dimensions.
Paul M. Brunet, Marcela Charfuelan, Roderick Cowie
Added 19 May 2011
Updated 19 May 2011
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where INTERSPEECH
Authors Paul M. Brunet, Marcela Charfuelan, Roderick Cowie, Marc Schröder, Hastings Donnan, Ellen Douglas-Cowie
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