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  • ...: Sense-making and clip allocation in mult-person, multi-stream, live play TV production |Tag(s)=EMCA; TV; Time;
    475 bytes (63 words) - 12:03, 7 December 2019
  • |Title=Assessments and the social construction of expertise in political TV interviews
    2 KB (227 words) - 13:35, 24 February 2016
  • |Title=Membership categorization as a tool for moral casting in TV discussion: The dramaturgical consequentiality of guest introductions |Tag(s)=EMCA; MCA; TV;
    1 KB (196 words) - 06:31, 30 November 2019
  • |Title=Followership: boosting power and position in popular TV fiction ...ves. By focusing on the narrative exchanges, we also contend that although TV fiction evokes issues that are decidedly modern and liberal in response to
    2 KB (306 words) - 11:04, 15 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Multimodality; TV; activity construction; control room; sequence organization ...for the practical purposes of the production of a show for an audience of TV- viewers. The study also considers possible mediating effects when perceivi
    2 KB (268 words) - 01:33, 18 October 2017
  • ...om space; Distributed cognition; EMCA; Mediated interaction; Studio space; TV-production
    2 KB (220 words) - 12:59, 23 November 2019
  • |Title=The studio interaction as a contextual resource for TV-production ...(s)=Context; EMCA; Intersubjectivity; Mediated interaction; TV-interviews; TV-production
    2 KB (248 words) - 11:52, 18 February 2016
  • ...c and spatial practices of embedded video as a therapeutic tool in reality TV parenting programmes |Tag(s)=EMCA; Keywords: embedded video; reality TV; parenting; media therapeutics; mediated space; recall; instruction; profes
    2 KB (325 words) - 13:16, 20 February 2016
  • ...as a collaborative practice for categorizing studio participants in a live TV-production |Tag(s)=EMCA; Membership Categorization Analysis; TV;
    347 bytes (44 words) - 01:28, 21 November 2019
  • |Title=The televisual accountability of reality TV: the visual morality of musical performances in talent shows
    476 bytes (61 words) - 00:43, 13 December 2019
  • |Title=Pans, tilts, and zooms: Conventional camera gestures in TV production |Tag(s)=EMCA; Multimodality; TV;
    371 bytes (50 words) - 07:45, 12 March 2016
  • ...o the body, allowing the surgeon to operate by looking at the anatomy on a TV monitor and not directly at the patient's body. On the other hand, broadcas
    2 KB (325 words) - 06:20, 27 April 2019
  • ...ma, professional settings, TV, and social research. I focus on its uses in TV talk shows and debates: through a systematic sequential analysis of the pos
    2 KB (259 words) - 08:19, 23 November 2019
  • ...ers are visually focused and bodily oriented towards what happens on their TV monitor; in the latter, players are mutually oriented, exchange glances and
    1 KB (221 words) - 09:29, 30 November 2019
  • ...2) ‘Bringing it all back home: selecting topic, category and location in TV News Programmes’, in S. Hester and W. Housley, eds. Language, interaction
    10 KB (1,334 words) - 07:07, 10 July 2014
  • === TV ===
    6 KB (948 words) - 09:16, 2 May 2024
  • ...a setting you can use to correct for flicker that happens when you record TV or computer screens (read the manual!)
    16 KB (2,568 words) - 09:23, 24 July 2014
  • ...atching Television: A conversation analytic investigation of assessment in TV audience interaction’. in the School of Education, Communication, and La ...ating the social and cultural functions of doing assessments during social TV watching.
    302 KB (44,160 words) - 09:22, 20 December 2023
  • Favorite TV Shows:
    3 KB (461 words) - 08:39, 10 July 2014
  • ..., and various forms involving audience participation (radio call-in shows, TV talk shows, and town meetings). These are analyzed as distinct arenas withi
    1 KB (162 words) - 05:15, 1 November 2019
  • ...journalistic expert identity in studio interactions between journalists on TV news
    2 KB (214 words) - 16:18, 3 November 2015
  • ...during an observational study of a team of four 3D designers working on a TV commercial. This study suggests that questions acting as reminders foster t
    1 KB (209 words) - 12:44, 16 December 2019
  • |Title=The role of gender in TV talk show discourse in Bangladesh: a conversational analysis of hosts’ in ...inst Lakoff’s Deficit Model, this study examined four episodes from four TV talk-shows in Bangladesh, two being hosted by men and two by women, to dete
    2 KB (330 words) - 10:36, 15 January 2020
  • ...wo data sets (informal dinner conversations among friends, and pro and con TV debates) provides interesting differences in responses to irony. From the f
    2 KB (374 words) - 09:05, 15 January 2016
  • ...rsus answers) but also of question types and answer types. For example, in TV talk shows, the hosts ask questions that elicit narratives and/or opinions
    1 KB (203 words) - 13:30, 25 November 2019
  • ...humour in the media reception situation: The case of watching football on TV
    1 KB (178 words) - 12:08, 23 November 2019
  • ...interactional discourse and conversation analysis, with a case study of a TV discussion in French initiated as a panel discussion, but lapsing out of th
    2 KB (212 words) - 06:40, 7 February 2016
  • ...imodal analysis of a significant, identity changing phone call mediated on TV |Tag(s)=Reality TV; TV; Family; EMCA; MCA;
    2 KB (260 words) - 03:38, 18 October 2019
  • |Title=When lives meet live: categorization work in a reality TV show and “experience work” in two home audiences |Tag(s)=EMCA; MCA; TV; Reality TV;
    2 KB (257 words) - 07:19, 28 November 2019
  • |Title=‘It׳s quite simple, really’: Shifting forms of expertise in TV documentaries ...nsions in various public participation programmes, this paper focuses on a TV programme format that is based on the cooperative interaction between profe
    2 KB (258 words) - 04:13, 27 December 2019
  • |Title=Adjournments during TV watching: A closer look into the organisation of continuing states of incip ...Adjournments; continuing states of incipient talk; conversation analysis; TV audience interaction;
    1 KB (183 words) - 01:50, 4 November 2018
  • ...broader context (e.g., everyday conversation, research interview, etc. vs. TV-discussion or -interview) on the design of the question-answer sequence
    3 KB (396 words) - 02:47, 10 May 2016
  • experimental game settings, a reality TV show, and TV and radio talk shows, for a total of 60.4 h. The analysis uncovered seven m
    1 KB (160 words) - 09:21, 5 July 2018
  • ...rom naturally-occurring Japanese conversations among peers as well as from TV talk shows, this study shows that Japanese speakers can nonetheless achieve
    2 KB (265 words) - 04:37, 1 November 2019
  • |Title=Bringing it all back home: selecting topic, category and location in TV news programmes
    465 bytes (59 words) - 03:23, 30 October 2019
  • ...ership categories across various settings from the O.J. Simpson trial, via TV commercials and news headlines, to school staff and referral meetings. The
    1 KB (163 words) - 03:41, 20 October 2019
  • ...have been the entertainment applications, such as online gaming, inhabited TV, artistic installations and museum exhibits (see Benford et al., 1997a,b, 1
    2 KB (220 words) - 12:31, 29 October 2019
  • |Title=Building alignments in public debate: A case study from British TV ...l rhetoric (Atkinson, 1984), to construct sides in 'live political talk on TV.
    1 KB (148 words) - 03:34, 20 October 2019
  • |Title=Rhetorical strategies in audience participation debates on radio and TV |Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; Participation; Debates; Radio; TV; Audience; Rhetorical Strategies
    1 KB (216 words) - 06:18, 19 October 2019
  • ...ia forms and genres, including televised audience debates, confrontational TV talk shows such as Oprah Winfrey and Ricki Lake, open-line talk radio shows
    1 KB (217 words) - 12:05, 3 November 2019
  • ...versation. A sample of an excerpt taken from a conversation of an American TV talk show was recorded and transcribed. Practices of interactional competen
    2 KB (238 words) - 10:21, 5 July 2018
  • ...nal and semi-private interaction (doctor-patient interaction, Big Brother, TV talk shows). These include pitch contour, pitch range and phonetic ending,
    2 KB (223 words) - 02:18, 29 November 2019
  • ...contested in the mass media, using articles in national newspapers & on a TV program. The DPS began with an almost empty intersubjectivity; how this was
    1 KB (215 words) - 00:39, 27 October 2019
  • ...ect of the documentary, their footage being intercut with existing reality TV footage of that same interviewee. The central contributions that the articl
    2 KB (267 words) - 11:42, 28 December 2019
  • ...ased on a video analysis of the interactions in a control-room during live TV broadcasts of football matches.
    3 KB (425 words) - 06:52, 20 June 2017
  • ...home away from home: Mediating parentcraft and domestic space in a reality tv parenting program |Tag(s)=EMCA; Parenting; Domestic Space; Reality TV; Discourse Analysis;
    2 KB (294 words) - 12:52, 20 November 2019
  • ...conflict: embodied interaction, domestic space and discipline in a reality TV parenting programme |Abstract=In 2003, a new reality TV genre appeared on British public television built on the spectacle of the p
    2 KB (252 words) - 10:26, 23 November 2019
  • |Title="Doing" interviewer roles in TV interview |Tag(s)=EMCA; TV; TV-interviews;
    463 bytes (65 words) - 09:31, 13 November 2019
  • ...rol-room. By a video-analysis of operators' interactions, it considers the TV-broadcast from the technological, collaborative and embodied environment of
    2 KB (271 words) - 04:04, 14 October 2017
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; Turn-taking; Morality; TV; ...n is rooted in our moral order and social norms including the norms of the TV debate and in which particular ones.
    1 KB (219 words) - 05:02, 9 October 2017
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; TV; Conversation Analysis;
    1 KB (133 words) - 08:33, 24 October 2019
  • ...period which dealt with J. Blühmel and the DPS, together with a relevant TV program. We focused on two problems. First, how was the political identity ...resented it in relation to the talk by other politicians elsewhere. In the TV debate a complementary strategy was observed. Those present in the studio d
    3 KB (479 words) - 07:47, 12 October 2017
  • ...early nineties. Our previous work addressed this issue in the settings of TV debates. We had found that the category ‘Romany’ was contested, but the ...n individual’s contribution can be multiplicated (e.g. what is said in a TV studio may be reproduced in several newspapers). We found that the distribu
    4 KB (579 words) - 15:00, 12 June 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; TV; TV-production; News; Genre; Ethnography; ...methodologically informed ethnography is used to analyse cooperation among TV professionals and make visible the everyday, routine, and situated practice
    2 KB (263 words) - 08:43, 12 October 2017
  • ...nteraction: toward a feminist analysis of a Japanese phone-in consultation TV program ...for feminist purposes. Using analysis of a Japanese phone-in consultation TV program, we take the position that CA has much to contribute to the feminis
    1 KB (187 words) - 02:01, 31 October 2019
  • 11:30 – 12:30 Matthias Broth, 'How a TV-crew manages its invisibility during live broadcasting' ...he practices through which different members of a TV-crew involved in live TV broadcasting achieve being unnoticed (supposedly) by the television audienc
    6 KB (821 words) - 16:34, 13 November 2017
  • '''On the polyfunctional dimension of JE SAIS [I know] in public and TV debates''' ...marker je sais [I know] in a ten-hour video-recorded corpus of public and TV debates. A statistical survey reveals only a dozen tokens; which appears to
    2 KB (343 words) - 02:29, 2 October 2018
  • ...o not have information on the caller's behaviour with respect to phone and TV use. Apart from a common conversational structure, different forms of “re
    2 KB (326 words) - 10:08, 13 November 2019
  • |Title=The before and after of a political interview on TV: Observations of off-camera interactions between journalists and politician
    1 KB (179 words) - 11:26, 25 November 2019
  • ...nalysis and conversation analysis of citizen contributions in sequences of TV talk, the study aims at locating citizen contributions on an imagined ‘br
    1 KB (199 words) - 10:15, 6 July 2018
  • ...)=Asymetrical configuration; EMCA; Enunciative analysis; Political ritual; TV debate ...omethodological conversation analysis, the paper examines sequences from a TV debate devoted to a proposal to restrict genetic en­gineering applications
    2 KB (370 words) - 02:40, 14 January 2020
  • ...study explores the co-construction of foreigner stereotypes in a Japanese TV show. Foreigner stereotypes in Japan have been criticized in theoretical an
    2 KB (267 words) - 07:51, 13 September 2023
  • |Title=Preference organization as a characterization device in TV sitcoms |Tag(s)=EMCA; Preference Organization; TV
    1 KB (158 words) - 04:17, 13 January 2020
  • |Title=Formulation sequence in Korean TV talk shows: pre-sequence as consensual grounds for managing category work |Tag(s)=EMCA; Korean; TV; Formulation; Confirmation; Pre-sequence; Categories
    467 bytes (57 words) - 05:26, 13 January 2020
  • |Tag(s)=Sports and television; TV broadcasting; professional practices; replay; interaction analysis ...lly triggered by the referee's whistle, constitute a practical problem for TV broadcasting. When the game is stopped, actions that then take place are no
    3 KB (417 words) - 11:15, 28 December 2019
  • ...s between these two request formats, using everyday conversations from the TV series Big Brother as corpus data. We argue that the difference concerns th
    2 KB (236 words) - 09:55, 15 January 2020
  • |Title=‘‘Congratulations, you’re on TV!”: Middle-space performances of live tweeters during the FIFA World Cup
    2 KB (215 words) - 02:08, 12 January 2020
  • ...rative and temporal relevance: segueing instant replay into live broadcast TV ...ake sense of what has just happened. This article shows how multi‐person TV production teams assemble timely and relevant instant replays that can be s
    2 KB (213 words) - 09:44, 17 January 2020
  • ...se of names, the particle ne, and response tokens on a Japanese discussion TV program |Tag(s)=EMCA; TV debate; Japanese; Moderator
    1 KB (194 words) - 09:05, 13 November 2019
  • ...sion program entitled Gekiron: Asa made nama terebi (“Fiery debate: Live TV until morning”), suggests that aizuchi may function, at least in some con
    2 KB (250 words) - 00:05, 18 November 2019
  • ...that shaped the image of Gorbachev as a television personality in British TV. It demonstrates how Gorbachev and Anderson moved between and played with a
    2 KB (256 words) - 12:11, 20 November 2019
  • ...ct=This article addresses the conversational process taking place during a TV interview in which the contrast shows up between the canonical procedure ov
    2 KB (248 words) - 03:56, 11 April 2020
  • ...orytelling; stage-managing; performance; multimodality; media linguistics; TV talk ...naging and performing are intertwined in order to produce storytellings on TV as "dramas to an audience" (Goffman 1974:508).
    3 KB (345 words) - 11:59, 12 January 2020
  • ...confessions: The discursive construction of guilty admissions in celebrity TV confessionals |Tag(s)=EMCA; Accusation; admitting guilt; broadcast talk; celebrity TV interview; confession; conversation analysis; discourse analysis; facework
    2 KB (252 words) - 10:44, 17 October 2019
  • ...eerzählen, zu Arztbesuchen und Polizeistreifen, zum Marihuana-Rauchen und TV-Konsum an. „Mikroskopiert“ (Ayaß und Meyer 2012) wurde dabei der lokal
    1 KB (164 words) - 02:06, 12 January 2020
  • ...ee years, with a salary according to the German public service scale grade TV-L 13 (Tarifvertrag für den öffentlichen Dienst der Länder). The gross an
    5 KB (807 words) - 13:57, 28 January 2020
  • ...he main role in controlling the whole interview.2. Both English and Arabic TV programmes exhibit different types and functions of interruptions because o
    3 KB (431 words) - 09:38, 4 September 2020
  • ...mine construction of social categories in an emprically robust way. During TV watching, the viewers do categorial work through assessment sequences. They
    3 KB (432 words) - 03:43, 17 March 2021
  • ...study presents an investigation into overlapping talk in a debate show on TV. The data in the present study comes from a show broadcast on the 9th of Ma
    2 KB (403 words) - 03:42, 17 March 2021
  • EG 13 TV-L
    4 KB (591 words) - 06:18, 15 September 2023
  • |Title=Expertise and the work of football match analysts in TV sport broadcasts ...equences of (English) football TV broadcasts where the pundit shows to the TV host in the studio and to the non-expert audience at home what happened dur
    1 KB (200 words) - 12:00, 9 November 2021
  • ...ve years, with a salary according to the German public service scale grade TV-L 13 (Tarifvertrag für den Öffentlichen Dienst der Länder ).
    5 KB (725 words) - 23:26, 9 October 2021
  • ...rontationen zu vermeiden. Die Analyse basiert auf Videodaten eines Reality-TV Programms über polizeiliche Begegnungen mit betrunkenen BürgerInnen, ausg ...o avoid confrontations. The analysis is based on video data from a reality TV show centred around police encounters with intoxicated citizens. Conversati
    2 KB (321 words) - 12:37, 23 October 2021
  • (PhD and/or Post Doc, Salary Level E 13 TV-L) at the Institute for “Romanistik und Latinistik” of the Department o
    3 KB (410 words) - 13:52, 10 June 2022
  • ...a network can be duplicated, or even multiplicated (e.g. what is said in a TV studio may be reproduced in several newspapers). Dialogical networks are in
    2 KB (215 words) - 22:38, 14 June 2022
  • ...ion-making, and a dataset of 80 cases of sexual initiation in contemporary TV-series and movies, we investigate the interactional practices by which sexu
    2 KB (213 words) - 06:48, 6 October 2022
  • (Entgeltgruppe 13 TV-L, 65 %)
    8 KB (1,010 words) - 08:00, 4 November 2022
  • ...ion-making, and a dataset of 80 cases of sexual initiation in contemporary TV-series and movies, we investigate the interactional practices by which sexu
    2 KB (218 words) - 12:40, 5 August 2023
  • ...three performance-based settings: (a) taiko ensemble rehearsal, (b) Korean TV show, and (c) ESL service-learning reflection. In each setting, participant
    2 KB (243 words) - 12:35, 5 August 2023
  • |Title=Enabling institutional messaging: TV journalists’ work with interviewee responses ...-public-conversation-analytic-studies/ch3-enabling-institutional-messaging-tv-journalists-work-with-interviewee-responses
    2 KB (243 words) - 01:31, 3 July 2023
  • Ergül, H. (2016). Adjournments during TV watching: A closer look into the organisation of continuing states of incip
    7 KB (910 words) - 23:50, 21 December 2023
  • '''(the salary is according to E 13 TV-L)
    4 KB (556 words) - 23:45, 2 July 2023
  • ...n an opening tweet that deals with daily online news topics or events on a tv show, for example.
    2 KB (311 words) - 10:45, 29 June 2023
  • ...or instance how they help interpret the multimodal source texts (films and TV programmes), especially the soundtracks, and how they enhance the understan
    2 KB (223 words) - 04:02, 8 December 2023
  • ...: The “real construction of society” in the opening of current affairs TV discussion
    3 KB (417 words) - 10:04, 30 January 2024
  • ...he sequential and reflexive achievement of coach participation in the live TV broadcasting of football ...cipation in the game is reflexively achieved. It adopts the perspective of TV control room members while broadcasting football matches to show how they p
    1 KB (160 words) - 09:09, 6 February 2024
  • * Pay grade TV-L 13
    6 KB (815 words) - 07:24, 8 April 2024