TY - GEN
T1 - How interlocutors coordinate with each other within emotional segments?
AU - Alam, Firoj
AU - Chowdhury, Shammur Absar
AU - Danieli, Morena
AU - Riccardi, Giuseppe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1963-2018 ACL.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - In this paper, we aim to investigate the coordination of interlocutors behavior in different emotional segments. Conversational coordination between the interlocutors is the tendency of speakers to predict and adjust each other accordingly on an ongoing conversation. In order to find such a coordination, we investigated 1) lexical similarities between the speakers in each emotional segments, 2) correlation between the interlocutors using psycholinguistic features, such as linguistic styles, psychological process, personal concerns among others, and 3) relation of interlocutors turn-taking behaviors such as competitiveness. To study the degree of coordination in different emotional segments, we conducted our experiments using real dyadic conversations collected from call centers in which agent's emotional state include empathy and customer's emotional states include anger and frustration. Our findings suggest that the most coordination occurs between the interlocutors inside anger segments, where as, a little coordination was observed when the agent was empathic, even though an increase in the amount of non-competitive overlaps was observed. We found no significant difference between anger and frustration segment in terms of turn-taking behaviors. However, the length of pause significantly decreases in the preceding segment of anger where as it increases in the preceding segment of frustration.
AB - In this paper, we aim to investigate the coordination of interlocutors behavior in different emotional segments. Conversational coordination between the interlocutors is the tendency of speakers to predict and adjust each other accordingly on an ongoing conversation. In order to find such a coordination, we investigated 1) lexical similarities between the speakers in each emotional segments, 2) correlation between the interlocutors using psycholinguistic features, such as linguistic styles, psychological process, personal concerns among others, and 3) relation of interlocutors turn-taking behaviors such as competitiveness. To study the degree of coordination in different emotional segments, we conducted our experiments using real dyadic conversations collected from call centers in which agent's emotional state include empathy and customer's emotional states include anger and frustration. Our findings suggest that the most coordination occurs between the interlocutors inside anger segments, where as, a little coordination was observed when the agent was empathic, even though an increase in the amount of non-competitive overlaps was observed. We found no significant difference between anger and frustration segment in terms of turn-taking behaviors. However, the length of pause significantly decreases in the preceding segment of anger where as it increases in the preceding segment of frustration.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85054974417
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85054974417
SN - 9784879747020
T3 - COLING 2016 - 26th International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Proceedings of COLING 2016: Technical Papers
SP - 728
EP - 738
BT - COLING 2016 - 26th International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Proceedings of COLING 2016
PB - Association for Computational Linguistics, ACL Anthology
T2 - 26th International Conference on Computational Linguistics, COLING 2016
Y2 - 11 December 2016 through 16 December 2016
ER -