Prosody is the rhythm, stress and intonation of speech, which
encodes information that is not encoded by the syntax or words of
an utterance. Prosody is critical for parsing speech, constructing
syntactic structure, and building a representation of the
conversational discourse model, among other linguistic
functions.
In 2008, researchers from linguistics, psychology and computer
science gathered at the inaugural meeting of the conference on
Experimental and Theoretical Approaches to Prosody at Cornell
University. The papers in this volume represent the cutting edge of
the prosody work presented at that conference.
The articles in this special issue tackle a number of key
questions: What type of information about syntax, semantics, and
context is reflected in prosody and intonation? How much of that
information can a listener retrieve from the signal? How does this
information facilitate language processing in online conversations?
How can this information be used to parse corpora, and how can
corpora be used to test theories on prosody?
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