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Prosodic Features at "Sentence Boundaries" in Oral Presentations

  • Umesaki, Atsuko-Furuta
    • MALSORI
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    • no.41
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    • pp.83-96
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    • 2001
  • It is generally said that falling intonation is used at the end of a declarative sentence. However, this is not the case with all stretches of spontaneous speech which are marked in transcription as sentences. The present paper examines intonation patterns appearing at the end of declarative sentences in oral presentations, and discusses instances where falling intonation does not appear. The texts used for analysis are eight oral presentations collected at international conferences in the field of physics. Quantitative and qualitative analyses are carried out. Three major factors related to discourse structure have been found for non-occurrence of falling intonation at sentence boundaries.

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Prosodic Features at "Sentence Boundaries" in Oral Presentations

  • Umesaki, Atsuko-Furuta
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2000.07a
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    • pp.149-164
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    • 2000
  • It is generally said that falling intonation is used at the end of a declarative sentence. However, this is not the case with all stretches of spontaneous speech which are marked in transcription as sentences. The present paper examines intonation patterns appearing at the end of declarative sentences in oral presentations, and discusses instances where falling intonation does not appear. The texts used for analysis are eight oral presentations collected at international conferences in the field of physics. Quantitative and qualitative analyses are carried out. Three major factors related to discourse structure have been found for nonoccurrence of falling intonation at sentence boundaries.

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Language- Independent Sentence Boundary Detection with Automatic Feature Selection

  • Lee, Do-Gil
    • Journal of the Korean Data and Information Science Society
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.1297-1304
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    • 2008
  • This paper proposes a machine learning approach for language-independent sentence boundary detection. The proposed method requires no heuristic rules and language-specific features, such as part-of-speech information, a list of abbreviations or proper names. With only the language-independent features, we perform experiments on not only an inflectional language but also an agglutinative language, having fairly different characteristics (in this paper, English and Korean, respectively). In addition, we obtain good performances in both languages. We have also experimented with the methods under a wide range of experimental conditions, especially for the selection of useful features.

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A study on the prosody generation in Korean speech synthesis using sentence structure analysis (구문분석을 이응한 한국어 음성합성의 운율생성 연구)

  • Beack Seune-Kwon;Kim Won-Cheol;Hahn Minsoo
    • Proceedings of the Acoustical Society of Korea Conference
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    • autumn
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    • pp.37-40
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    • 1999
  • In this paper, we presented the prosody analysis results of five selected words according to its usage in a sentence, i.e.. the part of sentence (PoS) while changing the type of sentences such as simple, conjugate, and complex sentences. The selected five Korean words were 'U-Ri-Na-Ra' 'Bul-Kuk-Sa', 'Uh-Muh-Ni', 'Han-Ra-San', and 'Cang-A-Ji'. These five words were used as a subjective, an objective, and an adverb in each simple, conjugate, and complex sentence. The pitch, energy, and duration of each word were then analyzed and used for the synthetic speech prosody Improvement. The subjective test on the prosody improvement showed that more than $50\%$ of our listeners are affirmative to the prosody Improvement of the synthetic speech.

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Anchoring Effect of the Prosecutor's Demand on Sentence: Evidence from Korean Sexual Crime Cases

  • KIM, JUNGWOOK;CHAE, SUBOK
    • KDI Journal of Economic Policy
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    • v.39 no.3
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    • pp.1-18
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    • 2017
  • The anchoring effect can be found when a decision shows cognitive prejudice towards the initial information given. Several studies have argued that such an effect is present even for judges in the courtroom. This paper seeks to find a relationship between judges' decisions on penalty sentences and the sentences recommended by prosecutors. In this study, 2,773 actual court cases are considered in the analysis, and quantile regression is used to show that the sentencing decisions judges make are anchored by the recommendations of prosecutors. However, this reliance on recommendations differs according to the seriousness of the crime committed. Specifically, at the lowest penalty levels, a one-month increase in the prosecutors' sentencing recommendation results in a 0.25-month increase in the judges' sentence, while at the highest sentence level, the judges' sentences increase by 0.78 months under an identical condition. The results of this research indicate the need to create more objective and clear sentencing guidelines in the future in an effort to mitigate the psychological pressure experienced by judges with regard to serious offences or heinous crimes.

Sentence Compression of Headline-style Abstract for Displaying in Small Devices (작은 화면 기기에서의 출력을 위한 신문기사 헤드라인 형식의 문장 축약 시스템)

  • Lee, Kong-Joo
    • The KIPS Transactions:PartB
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    • v.12B no.6 s.102
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    • pp.691-696
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    • 2005
  • In this paper, we present a pilot system that tn compress a Korean sentence automatically using knowledge extracted from news articles and their headlines. A sot of compressed sentences can be presented as an abstraction of a document. As a compressed sentence is of headline-style, it could be easily displayed on small devices, such as mobile phones and other handhold devices. Our compressing system has shown to be promising through a preliminary experiment.

Perception of Korean Prosody by Native Speakers of English and Native Speakers of Korean (영어 원어민과 한국어 원어민의 한국어운율 인식)

  • Yi, So-Pae
    • MALSORI
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    • no.65
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    • pp.1-11
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    • 2008
  • This study explored the perception of transplanted Korean prosody by NE (Native speakers of English) and NK (Native speakers of Korean) listeners. The Korean utterances of various sentence types produced by NE and NK were employed to transplant the original Korean prosody contours to the Korean utterances read by NE. Then, other NE and NK were instructed to rate the transplanted prosodic components. Results showed that the interactions between the two rater groups with the three factors (e.g., transplantation types & rater groups, sentence types & rater groups, sentence length & rater groups) turned out to be meaningful. Both rater groups preferred the combined effect of transplanted prosodic components (e.g. DP, DPI) to that of individual transplantation (e.g. I, D, P). Compared to NK, NE were more sensitive to duration change than pitch change whereas NK showed equal preference to the both. In sentence types such as De, Ex, Im, and Ta, NE perceived higher similarity than NK.

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Sentence Translation and Vocabulary Retention in an EFL Reading Class

  • Kim, Boram
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.67-84
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    • 2012
  • The present study investigated the effect of sentence translation as a production task on short-term and long-term retention of foreign vocabulary. 87 EFL university students at a beginning level, enrolled in reading class participated in the study. The study compared the performance of three groups on vocabulary recall: (1) Control group, (2) Translation group, and (3) Copy group. During the treatment sessions, translation group translated L1 sentences into English, while copy group simply copied given English sentences with each target word. Results of the immediate test were collected each week from week 2 to week 5 and analyzed by one-way ANOVA. Results revealed that regarding short-term vocabulary retention, participants in rote-copy condition outperformed those in translation group. Four weeks later a delayed test was administered to measure long-term vocabulary retention. In contrast, the results of two-way repeated measures ANOVA showed that long-term vocabulary retention of translation group was significantly greater than copy group. The findings suggest that although sentence translation is rather challenging to low-level learners, it may facilitate long-term retention of new vocabulary given the more elaborate and deeper processing the task entails.

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A Construction of Indexing System for Sentence Retrieval (문장 검색을 위한 색인시스템 구축 : 초 .중등 학생의 한국어 및 영어 문장을 중심으로)

  • 이태영
    • Journal of the Korean Society for information Management
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    • v.20 no.1
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    • pp.145-163
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    • 2003
  • An indexing language were studied to construct the sentences and paragraphs providing system aided to write a Korean or English composition. The indexing language includes the index terms like noun, predicate, and adverb. and also various index symbols. The subject name and the keyword Included the symbols, which Indicate the connectives between clauses in a sentence, is used as the access point. The search results show this system will be effective with large database and developed retrieval methods.

Numerals and Pragmatic Interpretations

  • Yeom, Jae-Il
    • Language and Information
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.47-65
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    • 2006
  • In this paper I address the problems of defining the semantics of numerals and accounting for how pragmatic inferences are made. I basically assume that a numeral n simply means '${\lambda}P{\lambda}x[#(x)n\;&\;P(x)]$', as commonly assumed. Even when a numeral n has 'at least' interpretation, a sentence with the number does not entail a sentence with n replaced with n-1. But when a sentence with n-1 holds, it is possible that a sentence with n or a larger number holds too. This is not based on a semantic relation, but on pragmatic informativeness. In addition to pragmatic strength, the actual reading of a numeral is affected by some background knowledge of generalizations about the world, but the ordering of pragmatic strength among numbers always plays a role in determining unilateral interpretations. In such a case, we can assume that a set of numbers relevant in the context forms a scale. Forming a scale does not necessarily lead to a unilateral interpretation. The bilateral interpretation of a number is possible in the context where it is known whether or not alternative sentences with contextually salient alternative numbers are true.

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