Proceeding of Fourth International Conference on Spoken Language Processing. ICSLP '96
DOI: 10.1109/icslp.1996.607235
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About the relationship between eyebrow movements and Fo variations

Abstract: Speech production is always accompanied by facial and gestural activity. The present study is part of a broader research project on how head movements and facial expressions are related to voice variations in different speech situations. Ten normal subjects were recorded while reading aloud, answering yes/no questions, and dialoguing with an interviewer. Rapid rising-falling eyebrow movements produced by the subjects as they spoke were associated with Fo rises in only 71% of the cases. This suggests that eyebr… Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…Within the most analyzed visual cues (eyebrows, head movements, and pointing gestures), and alongside pitch accents in the auditory component, eyebrow movements were shown to play a strong role in the perception and distinction of specific sentence types and pragmatic meanings in several languages. Eyebrow movements may function as a question marker in French (Purson et al, 1999), even when they are not necessarily coordinated with fundamental frequency changes (Cavé et al, 1996). The same visual cue also has a significant effect on the perception of focus (Krahmer et al, 2002) and prominence , 2006, 2008Krahmer & Swerts, 2007) in Dutch, and may help to distinguish between specific sentence types and pragmatic meanings across languages, such as between Dutch and Catalan (Borràs-Comes & Prieto, 2011;Borràs-Comes et al, 2014;Crespo-Sendra et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the most analyzed visual cues (eyebrows, head movements, and pointing gestures), and alongside pitch accents in the auditory component, eyebrow movements were shown to play a strong role in the perception and distinction of specific sentence types and pragmatic meanings in several languages. Eyebrow movements may function as a question marker in French (Purson et al, 1999), even when they are not necessarily coordinated with fundamental frequency changes (Cavé et al, 1996). The same visual cue also has a significant effect on the perception of focus (Krahmer et al, 2002) and prominence , 2006, 2008Krahmer & Swerts, 2007) in Dutch, and may help to distinguish between specific sentence types and pragmatic meanings across languages, such as between Dutch and Catalan (Borràs-Comes & Prieto, 2011;Borràs-Comes et al, 2014;Crespo-Sendra et al, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vowels are often lengthened in singing (Scotto di Carlo, 2007). Head and eyebrow movements are correlated with changes in pitch in speaking and in singing (Cavé et al, 1996;Munhall et al, 2004;Thompson & Russo, 2007;Yehia, Kuratate, & Vatikiotis-Bateson, 2002). For singing, these facial correlates of pitch may become more important, since they may help in normalizing vowels for melody-induced pitch changes that are larger than those for speech.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Visually, changes in F0 are mostly invisible in articulatory gestures, but correlate strongly with eyebrow and head movements (Cavé et al, 1996;Munhall et al, 2004;Yehia et al, 2002). Viewing the head movements of a speaker, for example, can improve the recognition of words in a sentence (Munhall et al, 2004) compared to seeing a speaker with no head movements.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%