@inProceedings{lundholmfors-2011-categorization-140918, title = {Categorization of pauses in conversational speech}, abstract = {Pauses are often divided into pauses between turns and pauses within turns; that is pauses where speaker change takes place, and pauses where the same speaker speaks before and after the pause. While this may be one way to categorize pauses, a further categorization will here be suggested and backed up by data. Within turns, there are two possible pause locations: a pause may occur at a possible transition relevance place (TRP), or it can occur within a syntactic unit. This suggests that when the pause occurs at a TRP, the speakers negotiate whether the current speaker shall continue speaking, or if there will be a turn change. When the speaker pauses within a syntactic unit, it is more clear that the speaker that spoke before the pause will continue after the pause. In analogy with this, at a turn change where no speaker has been nominated, speakers need to negotiate who will take the turn. When a speaker has been nominated by the previous speaker, the pause at the turn change does not include “turn negotiation.” When investigating pause lengths and variance, the pause types that do not include turn negotiation show clear similarities, as do the pauses that do include turn negotiation. It is therefore possible to conclude that when only dividing pauses into occurring between and within turns, some of the features that characterize different pause types are lost.}, booktitle = {Speaking of prosody: A symposium in conjunction with the 60th birthday of Professor Merle Horne. Lund University, May 21 2011 }, author = {Lundholm Fors, Kristina}, year = {2011}, }