Department of Linguistics, General Linguistics, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Institute for German Sign Language and Communication of the Deaf, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2024 May 30;19(5):e0304040. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304040. eCollection 2024.
This study investigates head nods in natural dyadic German Sign Language (DGS) interaction, with the aim of finding whether head nods serving different functions vary in their phonetic characteristics. Earlier research on spoken and sign language interaction has revealed that head nods vary in the form of the movement. However, most claims about the phonetic properties of head nods have been based on manual annotation without reference to naturalistic text types and the head nods produced by the addressee have been largely ignored. There is a lack of detailed information about the phonetic properties of the addressee's head nods and their interaction with manual cues in DGS as well as in other sign languages, and the existence of a form-function relationship of head nods remains uncertain. We hypothesize that head nods functioning in the context of affirmation differ from those signaling feedback in their form and the co-occurrence with manual items. To test the hypothesis, we apply OpenPose, a computer vision toolkit, to extract head nod measurements from video recordings and examine head nods in terms of their duration, amplitude and velocity. We describe the basic phonetic properties of head nods in DGS and their interaction with manual items in naturalistic corpus data. Our results show that phonetic properties of affirmative nods differ from those of feedback nods. Feedback nods appear to be on average slower in production and smaller in amplitude than affirmation nods, and they are commonly produced without a co-occurring manual element. We attribute the variations in phonetic properties to the distinct roles these cues fulfill in turn-taking system. This research underlines the importance of non-manual cues in shaping the turn-taking system of sign languages, establishing the links between such research fields as sign language linguistics, conversational analysis, quantitative linguistics and computer vision.
本研究调查了自然的德手语(DGS)互动中的点头,目的是发现服务于不同功能的点头在其语音特征上是否有所不同。早期关于口语和手语互动的研究表明,点头在运动形式上有所不同。然而,关于点头的语音特性的大多数说法都是基于手动注释,而没有参考自然主义的文本类型和听话人的点头,听话人的点头在很大程度上被忽视了。关于 DGS 以及其他手语中听话人的点头的语音特性及其与手动提示的相互作用的详细信息很少,点头的形式-功能关系仍然不确定。我们假设在肯定的语境中起作用的点头与在反馈中起作用的点头在形式和与手动项目的共同出现方面有所不同。为了检验这一假设,我们应用计算机视觉工具包 OpenPose 从视频记录中提取点头测量值,并根据持续时间、幅度和速度来检查点头。我们描述了 DGS 中的点头的基本语音特性及其与自然语料库数据中的手动项目的相互作用。我们的结果表明,肯定点头的语音特性与反馈点头的语音特性不同。反馈点头在产生时似乎平均较慢,幅度较小,并且通常在没有共同出现的手动元素的情况下产生。我们将这些语音特性的变化归因于这些提示在轮流系统中依次履行的不同角色。这项研究强调了非手动提示在塑造手语轮流系统中的重要性,为手语语言学、会话分析、定量语言学和计算机视觉等研究领域之间建立了联系。