The reviewed record of science sign in
Pith

arxiv: 2603.17061 · v2 · pith:OXKU4UVR · submitted 2026-03-17 · cs.HC · eess.AS

Collecting Prosody in the Wild: A Content-Controlled, Privacy-First Smartphone Protocol and Empirical Evaluation

Reviewed by Pith T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 kernel pith:OXKU4UVRrecord.jsonopen to challenge →

classification cs.HC eess.AS
keywords protocolprosodicanalysiscollectingcompliancecontent-controlleddatafeatures
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Collecting everyday speech data for prosodic analysis is challenging due to the confounding of prosody and semantics, privacy constraints, and participant compliance. We introduce and empirically evaluate a content-controlled, privacy-first smartphone protocol that uses scripted read-aloud sentences to standardize lexical content (including prompt valence) while capturing naturalistic variation in prosodic delivery. The protocol performs on-device prosodic feature extraction, deletes raw audio immediately, and transmits only derived features for analysis. We deployed the protocol in a large study (N = 560; 9,877 recordings), evaluated compliance and data quality, and conducted diagnostic prediction tasks on the extracted features, predicting self-reported speaker sex and momentary affective states (valence, arousal). We discuss implications and directions for advancing and deploying the protocol.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.