It is, uh, very likely? The impact of prosodic uncertainty cues on the perception and interpretation of spoken verbal probability phrases.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q1 MATHEMATICS, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS Risk Analysis Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-14 DOI:10.1111/risa.14319
Ruben D Vromans, Charlot C M van de Ven, Sanne J W Willems, Emiel J Krahmer, Marc G J Swerts
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Abstract

People typically use verbal probability phrases when discussing risks ("It is likely that this treatment will work"), both in written and spoken communication. When speakers are uncertain about risks, they can nonverbally signal this uncertainty by using prosodic cues, such as a rising, question-like intonation or a filled pause ("uh"). We experimentally studied the effects of these two prosodic cues on the listener's perceived speaker certainty and numerical interpretation of spoken verbal probability phrases. Participants (N = 115) listened to various verbal probability phrases that were uttered with a rising or falling global intonation and with or without a filled pause before the probability phrase. For each phrase, they gave a point estimate of their numerical interpretation in percentages and indicated how certain they thought the speaker was about the correctness of the probability phrase. Speakers were perceived as least certain when the verbal probability phrases were spoken with both prosodic uncertainty cues. Interpretation of verbal probability phrases varied widely across participants, especially when rising intonation was produced by the speaker. Overall, high probability phrases (e.g., "very likely") were estimated as lower (and low probability phrases, such as "unlikely," as higher) when they were uttered with a rising intonation. The effects of filled pauses were less pronounced, as were the uncertainty effects for medium probability phrases (e.g., "probable"). These results stress the importance of nonverbal communication when verbally communicating risks and probabilities to people, for example, in the context of doctor-patient communication.

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很有可能?前音不确定性线索对口语概率短语的感知和解释的影响。
在讨论风险时,人们通常会使用口头概率短语("这种治疗方法很可能有效"),无论是在书面交流还是口语交流中都是如此。当说话者对风险感到不确定时,他们可以使用一些非言语的前音提示来表示这种不确定性,例如上扬的、类似于疑问句的语调或充满停顿的语气("呃")。我们通过实验研究了这两种前音线索对听者感知说话者的确定性和口语概率短语的数字解释的影响。受试者(N = 115)聆听了各种口头概率短语,这些短语的整体语调有升有降,概率短语之前有无停顿。对于每个短语,受试者都会以百分比的形式给出数字解释的估计值,并指出他们认为说话者对该概率短语的正确性有多大把握。当口头概率短语同时使用两种不确定性的前音线索时,说话者被认为是最不确定的。不同受试者对言语概率短语的解释差异很大,尤其是当说话者发出上升语调时。总体而言,当说话者语调上升时,高概率短语(如 "很有可能")的估计值较低(而低概率短语(如 "不太可能")的估计值较高)。填充停顿的影响不那么明显,中等可能性短语(如 "很可能")的不确定性影响也是如此。这些结果强调了在向人们口头传达风险和概率时,例如在医患交流中,非语言交流的重要性。
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来源期刊
Risk Analysis
Risk Analysis 数学-数学跨学科应用
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
10.50%
发文量
183
审稿时长
4.2 months
期刊介绍: Published on behalf of the Society for Risk Analysis, Risk Analysis is ranked among the top 10 journals in the ISI Journal Citation Reports under the social sciences, mathematical methods category, and provides a focal point for new developments in the field of risk analysis. This international peer-reviewed journal is committed to publishing critical empirical research and commentaries dealing with risk issues. The topics covered include: • Human health and safety risks • Microbial risks • Engineering • Mathematical modeling • Risk characterization • Risk communication • Risk management and decision-making • Risk perception, acceptability, and ethics • Laws and regulatory policy • Ecological risks.
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