Publication | Open Access
The Montclair Map Task: Balance, Efficacy, and Efficiency in Conversational Interaction
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Citations
28
References
2018
Year
Speech CorpusCognitionPsycholinguisticsSpoken Language ProcessingCommunicationCognitive InteractionInteraction ManagementCorpus LinguisticsSpeech RecognitionPhoneticsConversation AnalysisLanguage StudiesVerbal InteractionInteractional LinguisticsCognitive ScienceDialogue ManagementTask PerformanceConversational Speech CorpusArtsConversational InteractionUser ExperienceMontclair Map TaskSpeech CommunicationSpeech TechnologyHuman CommunicationInterpersonal CommunicationHuman InteractionHuman-computer InteractionSpeech ProcessingSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
This paper introduces a conversational speech corpus collected during the completion of a map-matching task that is available for research purposes via the Montclair State University Digital Commons Data Repository. The Montclair Map Task is a new, role-neutral conversational task that involves paired iconic maps with labeled landmarks and a path drawn from a start point, around various landmarks, to a finish mark. One advantage of this task-oriented corpus is the ability to derive independent objective measures of task performance for both members of a conversational pair that can be related to aspects of communicative style. A total of 96 native English speakers completed the task in 16 same-sex female, 16 same-sex male, and 16 mixed-sex pairings. Conversations averaged 32 minutes in duration, yielding approximately 217,000 words. The transcription protocol delineates events such as speaking turns, inter-turn intervals, landmark phrases, fillers, pauses, overlaps, and backchannels, making this corpus a useful tool for investigating dynamics of conversational interaction. Analyses of communication efficacy and efficiency reveal that male pairs of talkers were less efficient than female and mixed-sex pairs with respect to partner map-matching task performance.
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