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Gestural cues for sentence segmentation (2005)

Abstract
In human-human dialogues, face-to-face meetings are often preferred over phone conversations. One explanation is that non-verbal modalities such as gesture provide additional information, making communication more efficient and accurate. If so, computer processing of natural language could improve by attending to non-verbal modalities as well. We consider the problem of sentence segmentation, using hand-annotated gesture features to improve recognition. We find that gesture features correlate well with sentence boundaries, but that these features improve the overall performance of a language-only system only marginally. This finding is in line with previous research on this topic. We provide a regression analysis, revealing that for sentence boundary detection, the gestural features are largely redundant with the language model and pause features. This suggests that gestural features can still be useful when speech recognition is inaccurate.

Publication details
Download http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.93.7509
Source http://publications.csail.mit.edu/tmp/MIT-CSAIL-TR-2005-028.pdf
Contributors CiteSeerX
Repository CiteSeerX - Scientific Literature Digital Library and Search Engine (United States)
Type text
Language English
Relation 10.1.1.133.1040, 10.1.1.7.461, 10.1.1.68.8371, 10.1.1.103.8498, 10.1.1.58.1366, 10.1.1.59.6551, 10.1.1.110.3423, 10.1.1.86.1884