Prosodic annotation aims to indicate patterns of intonation, stress and pauses in speech. It is a much more difficult type of annotation to achieve than the types discussed above: it cannot be done automatically and requires careful listening by a trained ear. The Lancaster/IBM Spoken English Corpus is the only prosodically transcribed corpus in which Lancaster has been involved to date. The prosodic annotation of the SEC was carried out by two phoneticians (Gerry Knowles and Briony Williams). A set of 14 special characters was used to represent prosodic features. Stressed syllables were marked with a symbol indicating the direction of the pitch movement. Syllables which were felt to be stressed but with no independent pitch movement were marked with a circle (or bullet in the printed version). Unstressed syllables, whose pitch is predictable from the tone marks of surrounding accented syllables, were left unmarked.
Prosody is considerably more impressionistic than other linguistic levels in corpus annotation. Thus to check on the consistency of transcriptions, some sections (approx. 9% of the corpus) were independently transcribed by both transcribers. There are considerable differences in these transcriptions (cf. Wilson, 1989; Knowles, 1991), but the resulting correlations could have important implications for future research (cf. Wichmann, 1991).
Source from:
http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/annotation.html#prosodic