Entrainment, dominance and alliance in supreme court hearings

A major goal of the Cognitive Infocommunication approach is to develop applications in which human and artificial cognitive systems are made to work more effectively. A critical step in this process is improving our understanding of human-human interaction so that it may be modeled more closely. Our...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Benus, S.
Otros Autores: Gravano, A., Levitan, R., Levitan, S.I, Willson, L., Hirschberg, J.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Acceso en línea:Registro en Scopus
DOI
Handle
Registro en la Biblioteca Digital
Aporte de:Registro referencial: Solicitar el recurso aquí
LEADER 19011caa a22015257a 4500
001 PAPER-14742
003 AR-BaUEN
005 20230420110608.0
008 190411s2014 xx ||||fo|||| 00| 0 eng|d
024 7 |2 scopus  |a 2-s2.0-84908076577 
030 |a KNSYE 
040 |a Scopus  |b spa  |c AR-BaUEN  |d AR-BaUEN 
100 1 |a Benus, S. 
245 1 0 |a Entrainment, dominance and alliance in supreme court hearings 
260 |b Elsevier  |c 2014 
270 1 0 |m Benus, S.; Constantine the Philosopher UniversitySlovakia 
504 |a Babel, M., Evidence for phonetic and social selectivity in spontaneous phonetic imitation (2012) J. Phonet., 40, pp. 177-189 
504 |a Babel, M., Bulatov, D., The role of fundamental frequency in phonetic accommodation (2011) Lang. Speech, 55 (2), pp. 231-248 
504 |a Barányi, P., Persa, G., Csápó, A., Definition of cognitive infocommunications and an architectural implementation of gognitive gnfocommunications systems (2011) World Acad. Sci. Eng. Technol., 58, pp. 501-505 
504 |a Beebe, L.M., Social and situational factors affecting the communicative strategy of dialect code-switching (1981) Int. J. Sociol. Lang., 32, pp. 139-149 
504 |a Bell, L., Gustafson, J., Heldner, M., Prosodic adaptation in human-computer interaction (2003) Proceedings of 15th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences 
504 |a Benus, S., Social Aspects of Entrainment in Spoken Interaction. Cogn. Comput., , (in press) 
504 |a Benus, S., Variability and stability in collaborative dialogues: Turn-taking and filled pauses (2009) Proceedings of the 10th INTERSPEECH, pp. 709-799 
504 |a Benus, S., Gravano, A., Hirschberg, J., Pragmatic aspects of temporal entrainment in turn-taking (2011) J. Pragmat., 43 (12), pp. 3001-3027 
504 |a Benus, S., Enos, F., Hirschberg, J., Shriberg, E., Pauses and deceptive speech (2006) Proceedings of 3rd International Conference on Speech Prosody 
504 |a Bilous, F., Krauss, R.M., Dominance and accommodation in the conversational behavior of same- and mixed-gender dyads (1988) Lang. Commun., 8, pp. 183-194 
504 |a Boersma, P., Weenink, D., (2013) Doing Phonetics by Computer, , (computer program, www.praat.org) 
504 |a Bourhis, R.Y., Giles, H., Lambert, W.E., Social consequences of accommodating one's style of speech: A cross-national investigation (1975) Int. J. Sociol. Lang., 6, pp. 55-72 
504 |a Bourhis, R., Giles, H., The language of intergroup distinctiveness (1977) Language, Ethnicity and Intergroup Relations, pp. 119-135. , H. Giles, Academic Press London 
504 |a Brennan, S.E., Lexical entrainment in spontaneous dialog (1996) Proceedings of the International Symposium on Spoken Dialog (ISSD) 
504 |a Brennan, S.E., Clark, H.H., Conceptual pacts and lexical choice in conversation (1996) J. Exp. Psychol.: Learn. Memory Cogn., 22 (6), pp. 1482-1493 
504 |a Brennan, S.E., Hanna, J.E., Partner-specific adaptation in dialogue (2009) Top. Cogn. Sci., 1, pp. 274-291 
504 |a Brennan, S.E., Williams, M., The feeling of another's knowing: Prosody and conversational fillers as cues to listeners about the metacognitive states of speakers (1995) J. Memory Lang., 34, pp. 383-398 
504 |a Buder, E.H., Warlaumont, A.S., Oller, D.K., Chorna, L.B., Dynamic Indicators of Mother-Infant Prosodic and Illocutionary Coordination (2010) Proceedings of 5th Speech Prosody 
504 |a Buller, D.B., Aune, R.K., The effects of vocalics and nonverbal sensitivity on compliance: A speech accommodation theory explanation (1988) Hum. Commun. Res., 14 (3), pp. 301-332 
504 |a Burgoon, J., Dunbar, N., An interactionist perspective on dominance submission: Interpersonal dominance as a dynamic, situationally contingent social skill (2000) Commun. Monogr., 67, pp. 96-121 
504 |a Cappella, J.N., Planalp, S., Talk and silence sequences in informal conversationa III: Interspeaker influence (1981) Hum. Commun. Res., 7 (2), pp. 117-132 
504 |a Chartrand, T., Bargh, J., The chameleon effect: The perception-behavior link and social interaction (1999) J. Pers. Soc. Psychol., 76, pp. 893-910 
504 |a Clark, H.H., Fox Tree, J.E., Using uh and um in spontaneous speaking (2002) Cognition, 84, pp. 73-111 
504 |a Cohen, J., A coefficient of agreement for nominal scales (1960) Educ. Psychol. Measure., 20 (1), pp. 37-46 
504 |a Coulston, R., Oviatt, S., Darves, C., Amplitude convergence in children's conversational speech with animated personas (2002) Proceedings of ICSLP 
504 |a Csapó, A., Baranyi, P., A conceptual framework for the design of audio based cognitive infocommunication channels (2012) Recent Advances in Intelligent Engineering Systems, pp. 261-281. , J. Fodor, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 
504 |a Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil, D., Lee, L., Pang, B., Kleinberg, J., Echoes of power: Language effects and power differences in social interaction (2012) Proceedings of the 21st International Conference on World Wide Web, pp. 699-708 
504 |a Delvaux, V., Soquett, A., The influence of ambient speech on adult speech productions through unintentional imitation (2007) Phonetica, 64, pp. 145-173 
504 |a Dunbar, N.E., Burgoon, J.K., Perceptions of power and interactional dominance in interpersonal relationships (2005) J. Soc. Personal Relat., 22, pp. 231-257 
504 |a Dunbar, N.E., Bippus, A.M., Young, S.L., Interpersonal dominance in relational conflict: A view from Dyadic Power Theory (2008) Interpersona, 2 (1), pp. 1-33 
504 |a Epstein, L., Landes, W., Posner, R.A., (2009) Inferring the Winning Party in the Supreme Court from the Pattern of Questioning at Oral Argument, , University of Chicago Law & Economics, Olin Working Paper No. 466 
504 |a Feldstein, S., Crown, C.L., Oriental and Canadian conversational interactions: Chronographic structure and interpersonal perception (1990) J. Asian Pacific Commun., 1, pp. 247-266 
504 |a Giles, H., Mulac, A., Bradac, J.J., Johnson, P., (1987) Speech Accommodation Theory: The Next Decade and beyond, pp. 13-48. , Communication Yearbook Sage Newbury Park 10 
504 |a Giles, H., Coupland, N., Coupland, J., Entrainment theory: Communication, context and consequence (1991) Contexts of Entrainment: Developments in Applied Sociolinguistics, pp. 1-68. , H. Giles, J. Coupland, N. Coupland, Cambridge University Press Cambridge 
504 |a Goleman, D., Social Intelligence: The new science of human relationships (2006) Bantam 
504 |a Gorter, D., Aspects of language choice in the Frisian-Dutch bilingual context: Neutrality and asymmetry (1987) J. Multilingual Multicul. Develop., 8, pp. 121-132 
504 |a Gravano, A., Hirschberg, J., Turn-taking cues in task-oriented dialogue (2011) Comput. Speech Lang., 25 (3), pp. 601-634 
504 |a Gregory, S.W., Webster, S., A nonverbal signal in voices of interview partners effectively predicts communication entrainment and social status perceptions (1996) J. Pers. Soc. Psychol., 70, pp. 1231-1240 
504 |a Guitar, B., Marchinkoski, L., Influence of mothers' slower speech on their children's speech rate (2001) J. Speech Lang. Hear. Res., 44, pp. 853-861 
504 |a Hay, J., Jannedy, S., Mendoza-Denton, N., Oprah and/ay/: Lexical frequency, referee design and style (1999) Proceedings of International Congress of Phonetic Sciences 
504 |a Hirschberg, J., Speaking more like you: Entrainment in conversational speech (2011) Proceedings of Interspeech, pp. 27-31 
504 |a http://scdb.wustl.edu/; http://www.oyez.org/; Jacobson, R., Closing statements: Linguistics and poetics (1960) Style in Language, pp. 350-377. , T.A. Sebeok, MIT Press Cambridge, Massachusetts 
504 |a Jaffe, J., Feldstein, S., (1970) Rhythms of Dialogue, , Academic Press New York 
504 |a Kontra, M., Gosy, M., Approximation of the standard: A form of variability in bilingual speech (1988) Methods in Dialectology, pp. 442-455. , A.R. Thomas, Multilingual Matters Clevedon 
504 |a Levitan, R., Gravano, A., Hirschberg, J., Entrainment on backchannel-preceding cues (2011) Proceedings of ACL 
504 |a Levitan, R., Hirschberg, J., Measuring acoustic-prosodic entrainment with respect to multiple levels and dimensions (2011) Proceedings of Interspeech 
504 |a Levitan, R., Gravano, A., Willson, L., Benus, S., Hirschberg, J., Nenkova, A., Acoustic-prosodic entrainment and social behavior (2012) Proceedings of HLT/NAACL, pp. 11-19 
504 |a Matarazzo, J.D., Weins, A.N., Matarazzo, R.G., Saslow, G., Speeech and silence behaviour in clinical psychotherapy and its laboratory correlates (1968) Research in Psychotherapy, 3, pp. 347-394. , J. Schlier, H. Hunt, J.D. Matarazzo, C. Savage, American Psychological Association Washington, DC 
504 |a Namy, L.L., Nygaard, L.C., Sauerteig, D., Gender differences in vocal accommodation: The role of perception (2002) J. Lang. Soc. Psychol., 21, pp. 422-432 
504 |a Nass, C., Moon, Y., Fogg, B.J., Reeves, B., Dryer, D.C., Can computer personalities be human personalities? (1995) Int. J. Hum-Comput Stud., 43 (2), pp. 223-239 
504 |a Natale, M., Convergence of mean vocal intensity in dyadic communication as a function of social desirability (1975) J. Pers. Soc. Psychol., 32 (5), pp. 790-804 
504 |a Niederhoffer, K., Pennebaker, J., Linguistic style matching in social interaction (2002) J. Lang. Soc. Psychol., 21 (4), pp. 337-360 
504 |a Nenkova, Gravano, A., Hirschberg, J., High frequency word entrainment in spoken dialogue (2008) Proceedings of ACL/HLT, pp. 169-172 
504 |a Newman, M.L., Pennebaker, J.W., Berry, D.S., Richards, J.M., Lying words: Predicting deception from linguistic styles (2003) Pers. Soc. Psychol. Bull., 29, pp. 665-675 
504 |a Pennebaker, J.W., Booth, R.J., Francis, M.E., (2007) Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count: LIWC 
504 |a Pentland, A., To signal is human (2010) American Sci., 98, pp. 204-210 
504 |a Pardo, J.S., On phonetic convergence during conversational interaction (2006) J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 119 (4), pp. 2382-2393 
504 |a Pickering, M.J., Garrod, S., Toward a mechanistic psychology of dialogue (2004) Behav. Brain Sci., 27, pp. 169-226 
504 |a Poggi, I., D'Errico, F., Dominance signals in debates (2010) HBU 2010, pp. 163-174. , A.A. Salah, LNCS 6219 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 
504 |a Putnam, W., Street, R., The conception and perception of noncontent speech performance: Implications for speech accommodation theory (1984) Int. J. Sociol. Lang., 46, pp. 97-114 
504 |a Ranganath, R., Jurafsky, D., McFarland, D., It's not You, it's Me: Detecting flirting and its misperception in speed-dates (2009) Proceedings of EMNLP 
504 |a Reitter, D., Moore, J.D., Predicting success in dialogue (2007) Proceedings of ACL 
504 |a Richardson, M.J., Marsh, K.L., Isenhower, R.W., Goodman, J.R.L., Schmidt, R.C., Rocking together: Dynamics of intentional and unintentional interpersonal coordination (2007) Hum. Movement Sci., 26, pp. 867-891 
504 |a Sexton, J.B., Helmreich, R.L., Analyzing cockpit communications: The links between language, performance, and workload (2000) Hum. Perform. Extreme Environ., 5, pp. 63-68 
504 |a Sherblom, J., La Riviere, C., Speech accommodation and the effects of cognitive uncertainty and physiological arousal upon (1987) Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Speech Communication Association 
504 |a Shullman, S.L., The illusion of devil's advocacy: How the justices of the Supreme Court foreshadow their decisions during oral argument (2004) J. Appellate Pract. Process, 6 (2) 
504 |a Shriberg, E., To "errrr" is human: Ecology and acoustics of speech disfluencies (2001) J. Int. Phonet. Assoc., 31 (1), pp. 153-169 
504 |a Simmons, R.A., Gordon, P.C., Chambless, D.L., Pronouns in marital interaction (2005) Psychol. Sci., 16, pp. 932-936 
504 |a Stenström, A., Pauses in monologue and dialogue (1990) London-Lund Corpus of Spoken English: Description and Research, , J. Svartvik, Lund University Press Lund 
504 |a Stoyanchev, S., Stent, A., Lexical and syntactic priming and their impact in deployed spoken dialogue systems (2009) Proceedings of NAACL 
504 |a Stewart, O.W., Corley, M., Hesitation disfluencies in spontaneous speech: The meaning of um (2008) Lang. Linguist. Compass, 4, pp. 589-602 
504 |a Swerts, M., Conversational fillers as markers of discourse structure (1998) J. Pragmat., 30, pp. 485-496 
504 |a Traunmüller, H., Analytical expressions for the tonotopic sensory scale (1990) J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 88 (1), pp. 97-100 
504 |a Van Den Berg, M.E., Language planning and language se in Taiwan: Social identity, language accommodation, and language choice behavior (1986) Int. J. Sociol. Lang., 1986 (59), pp. 97-116 
504 |a Ward, D., Litman, Automatically measuring lexical and acoustic/prosodic convergence in tutorial dialog corpora (2007) Proceedings of the SLaTE Workshop on Speech and Language Technology in Education 
504 |a Ward, N.G., Mamidipally, S.K., Factors affecting speaking-rate adaptation in task-oriented dialogs (2008) Proceedings of 4th Speech Prosody 
504 |a Welkowitz, J., Bond, R.N., Feldstein, S., Gender and conversational time patterns as Japanese-American adults and children in same- and mixed-gender dyads (1984) J. Lang. Soc. Psychol., 3, pp. 127-138 
504 |a Yaeger-Dror, M., The influence of changing vitality on convergence toward a dominant linguistic norm: An Israeli example (1988) Lang. Commun., 8, pp. 285-306 
504 |a Ytsma, J., Bilingual classroom interaction in Friesland (1988) Bilingualism and the Individual, pp. 53-68. , A. Holman, E. Hansen, J. Gimbel, J.N. Jorgensen, Multilingual Matters Clevedon 
506 |2 openaire 
520 3 |a A major goal of the Cognitive Infocommunication approach is to develop applications in which human and artificial cognitive systems are made to work more effectively. A critical step in this process is improving our understanding of human-human interaction so that it may be modeled more closely. Our work addresses this task by examining the role of entrainment - the propensity of conversational partners to behave like one another - in (1) the production of conversational fillers (CFs) and acoustic intensity; (2) patterns of turn-taking; and (3) Linguistic Style. markers and how all of these relate to power relations, conflict, and voting behavior in a corpus of speech produced by justices and lawyers during oral arguments of the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2001 term. We examine several different measures of entrainment in justice-lawyer pairs to see whether or not they are related to justices' favorable or unfavorable votes for the lawyer's side. While two measures (a naive measure of similarity in CF rates and global similarity in CF phonetic realizations for the entire session) show no relationship, a third, which measures local entrainment in CFs in lawyer-justice pairs, does in fact identify a significant positive relationship between entrainment and justice votes. With respect to local entrainment in intensity, we found that lawyers do entrain more to justices than justices to lawyers, although there is no greater entrainment of female lawyers than of male lawyers. When we examine the relationship between entrainment in intensity and judicial voting, we find that, when justices voted for the petitioners, there is significant evidence of entrainment by both petitioners and respondents to justices. With respect to turn-taking behavior, we find that certain patterns of overlaps in turn exchanges between justices and lawyers are correlated with justices' voting behavior for four of the justices in our corpus. Finally, we find that there are lexical cues to divisiveness within the Court itself that can distinguish cases with close verdicts from cases with unanimous verdicts. We link these results to the possibility of building cognitive info-communication interfaces that exploit features of human-human entrainment for increasing effectiveness of human-machine interactions. © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.  |l eng 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: National Science Foundation, IIS-0803148, ANPCYT PICT-2009-0026 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: European Regional Development Fund 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas 
536 |a Detalles de la financiación: This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. IIS-0803148 , ANPCYT PICT-2009-0026, CONICET and by the project implementation: Technology research for the management of business processes in heterogeneous distributed systems in real time with the support of multimodal communication, ITMS 26240220064 supported by the Research & Development Operational Programme funded by the ERDF. 
593 |a Constantine the Philosopher University, Nitra, Slovakia 
593 |a Institute of Informatics, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia 
593 |a Departamento de Computación, FCEyN, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina 
593 |a National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Av Rivadavia 1917, Buenos Aires, C1033AAJ, Argentina 
593 |a Department of Computer Science, Columbia University, 450 Computer Science Building, 1214 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027-7003, United States 
690 1 0 |a COGINFOCOM INTERFACES 
690 1 0 |a CONVERSATIONAL FILLERS 
690 1 0 |a DOMINANCE 
690 1 0 |a ENTRAINMENT 
690 1 0 |a LINGUISTIC STYLE 
690 1 0 |a TURN-TAKING 
690 1 0 |a COGINFO COMS 
690 1 0 |a DOMINANCE 
690 1 0 |a LINGUISTIC STYLES 
690 1 0 |a SUPREME COURT 
690 1 0 |a TURN-TAKING 
690 1 0 |a AIR ENTRAINMENT 
700 1 |a Gravano, A. 
700 1 |a Levitan, R. 
700 1 |a Levitan, S.I. 
700 1 |a Willson, L. 
700 1 |a Hirschberg, J. 
773 0 |d Elsevier, 2014  |g v. 71  |h pp. 3-14  |p Knowl Based Syst  |x 09507051  |w (AR-BaUEN)CENRE-5908  |t Knowledge-Based Systems 
856 4 1 |u https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84908076577&doi=10.1016%2fj.knosys.2014.05.020&partnerID=40&md5=5288cf71cbfd1c88e307b0a862c2c5e9  |y Registro en Scopus 
856 4 0 |u https://doi.org/10.1016/j.knosys.2014.05.020  |y DOI 
856 4 0 |u https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09507051_v71_n_p3_Benus  |y Handle 
856 4 0 |u https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_09507051_v71_n_p3_Benus  |y Registro en la Biblioteca Digital 
961 |a paper_09507051_v71_n_p3_Benus  |b paper  |c PE 
962 |a info:eu-repo/semantics/article  |a info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo  |b info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion