05712nam 2200709 450 991045997650332120200903223051.090-272-7003-1(CKB)3710000000270464(EBL)1826114(SSID)ssj0001368844(PQKBManifestationID)12537421(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001368844(PQKBWorkID)11286694(PQKB)11431538(MiAaPQ)EBC1826114(Au-PeEL)EBL1826114(CaPaEBR)ebr10960630(CaONFJC)MIL663021(OCoLC)894171159(EXLCZ)99371000000027046420141106h20142014 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrSpoken corpora and linguistic studies /edited by Tommaso Raso, Heliana Mello ; cover design, Françoise BerserikAmsterdam, Netherlands ;Philadelphia, Pennsylvania :John Benjamins Publishing Company,2014.©20141 online resource (506 p.)Studies in Corpus Linguistics,1388-0373 ;Volume 61Description based upon print version of record.1-322-31739-9 90-272-0369-5 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Spoken Corpora and Linguistic Studies; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction. Spoken corpora and linguistic studies: Problems and perspectives; 1. Why this book ; 2. Some important issues ; 2.1 What do we intend when we consider speech as the natural modality of language? ; 2.2 Prosody ; 2.3 Illocution, attitude, emotion ; 2.4 Information structure ; 3. The content of the book ; 3.1 Experiences and requirements of spoken corpora compilation ; 3.2 Multilevel corpus annotation ; 3.3 Prosody and its functional levels3.4 Syntax and information structure References ; Section I. Experiences and requirements of spoken corpora compilation; 1. Methodological issues for spontaneous speech corpora compilation; 1. Introduction ; 2. Speech corpora: State of the art and spontaneous speech ; 2.1 Speech corpora types ; 2.2 Spontaneous speech corpora ; 2.3 Spoken corpora and linguistic diasystem ; 3. Architecture of spontaneous speech corpora and the importance of diaphasy ; 3.1 The architecture ; 3.2 Spontaneous speech corpus branching ; 3.3 Interactional typologies ; 3.4 Diaphasic variation ; 3.5 Metadata4. Data collection and treatment 4.1 Recordings ; 4.2 Speech representation and transcription ; 5. Usability ; 5.1 Alignment ; 5.2 Informational annotation ; 6. Conclusion ; References ; 2. A multilingual speech corpus of North-Germanic languages; 1. Introduction ; 2. Challenges in the corpus design and development ; 2.1 Methodology for collecting speech ; 2.2 Transcription and tagging ; 2.3 Metadata ; 2.4 Multilingual search ; 2.5 Links to audio and video ; 2.6 Results presented on maps ; 3. Results from research on the Nordic Dialect Corpus ; 4. Conclusion ; Acknowledgements ; ReferencesLinks 3. Methodological considerations for the development and use of sign language acquisition corpora; 1. Introduction ; 2. Metadata ; 3. Designing annotation patterns------ ; 4. Sign IDs ; 5. Conclusion ; Acknowledgements ; References ; Section II. Multilevel corpus annotation; 4. The grammatical annotation of speech corpora: Techniques and perspectives; 1. Introduction ; 2. The corpora ; 3. Constraint Grammar ; 4. Parser architecture ; 5. CG adaptations for orality features in speech-like corpora ; 6. Cross-corpus parser evaluation ; 7. Comparing orality markers ; 7.1 General comparison7.2 Pronouns 7.3 Emoticons ; 7.4 Non-standard syntax in TV news jargon: Examples and solutions ; 8. CG-Annotation of linguistically transcribed ordinary speech ; 9. C-ORAL-Brasil methodology - speech-specific adaptations ; 9.1 Text flow normalization ; 9.2 Tokenization ; 9.3 Lexical and orthographic normalization ; 9.4 Syntactic segmentation ; 10. Evaluating the PALAVRAS speech tagger ; 11. Conclusions and outlook ; References ; 5. The IPIC resource and a cross-linguistic analysis of information structure; 1. Introduction ; 2. Theoretical background3. Implementation of L-ACT in spoken language corporaThis article aims to show how a corpus driven theory that analyses speech through information units can better account for Discourse Markers (DM) identification and analysis. We propose that the speech flow can only be properly analyzed if segmented into utterances and tone units through prosodic parameters. Utterances correspond to speech acts and tone units to information units (IU); therefore, it is possible for DMs to be identified since they correspond to dialogic information units (DU). Each IU is submitted to different prosodic conditions in order to carry their function. This allows foStudies in corpus linguistics ;Volume 61.Speech acts (Linguistics)PragmaticsData processingCorpora (Linguistics)Electronic books.Speech acts (Linguistics)PragmaticsData processing.Corpora (Linguistics)401/.41Raso TommasoMello HelianaBerserik FrançoiseMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910459976503321Spoken Corpora and Linguistic Studies1078703UNINA