ملخص
The human tendency to adapt to interlocutors to become more similar, known as entrainment, has been studied for many languages. To our knowledge, however, there have only been two studies relating to the phenomenon in any Semitic language, specifically Hebrew, which had limited scope. We greatly expand on this by conducting an analysis of acoustic-prosodic entrainment in a corpus of task-oriented Hebrew dialogues. We use previously established methodology to facilitate comparison with prior results for other languages. We find that acoustic-prosodic entrainment at turn exchanges is present in Hebrew interactions to a similar degree as for Indo-European languages. The most notable difference with those languages is a greater tendency for divergent behavior in Hebrew, particularly among mixed gender speaker pairs. Compared to American English, we also note a lack of global similarity between speakers’ mean feature values. We do not attribute these distinctions to specific linguistic differences but discuss possible sources of variation based on language and other factors. Our data reveals no clear pattern of differences between gender pairs or between speakers responding to male or female interlocutors, respectively, at turn exchanges. There is also no difference at all between responding speakers based on their gender. However, we do find that speakers who depend on information tend to match their interlocutors more closely at turn exchanges than those who possess it.
اللغة الأصلية | الإنجليزيّة |
---|---|
رقم المقال | 101005 |
دورية | Journal of Phonetics |
مستوى الصوت | 83 |
المعرِّفات الرقمية للأشياء | |
حالة النشر | نُشِر - نوفمبر 2020 |
ملاحظة ببليوغرافية
Funding Information:This work was supported by the Open Media and Information Lab (OMILab) at The Open University of Israel [Grant No. 20184] and by the National Science Foundation [Grant No. 1845710]. We would also like to thank the Editor-in-Chief, Professor Taehong Cho, the Guest Editor for the Special Issue on Vocal Accommodation, Professor Jennifer Pardo, and the three anononymous reviewers for their feedback and suggestions which helped improve and clarify this manuscript.
Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Open Media and Information Lab (OMILab) at The Open University of Israel [Grant No. 20184] and by the National Science Foundation [Grant No. 1845710]. We would also like to thank the Editor-in-Chief, Professor Taehong Cho, the Guest Editor for the Special Issue on Vocal Accommodation, Professor Jennifer Pardo, and the three anononymous reviewers for their feedback and suggestions which helped improve and clarify this manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd