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  • Theoretical objects
    5 KB (526 words) - 04:39, 1 November 2019
  • |Title=The order of ordering: Objects, requests and embodied conduct in a public bar |Tag(s)=EMCA; Multimodality; Objects;
    1 KB (189 words) - 11:32, 7 December 2019
  • |Title=Incidental and essential objects in interaction: paper documents in journalistic work |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    1 KB (181 words) - 10:36, 7 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=Ethnomethodology; EMCA; Racism; Race; Social objects
    350 bytes (42 words) - 00:46, 15 June 2020
  • ...distinctive phenomenal field properties of designed enterprises: oriented objects, directional, orientational, positional, place, placement, distanced, facin
    1 KB (181 words) - 09:17, 31 October 2019
  • ...gories, and the transposition of the abstraction onto tangible and visible objects on the paper. Therefore, the result of the organization of order in instruc
    2 KB (302 words) - 11:08, 11 March 2016
  • |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity ...re inseparable for members when developing a course of practical activity. Objects in our study include tangible artefacts that have physical materiality as w
    1 KB (189 words) - 11:22, 7 December 2019
  • ...regular basis, we describe the linguistic features that emerge as learning objects, and some of the learning practices in which they are embedded. We will arg
    2 KB (226 words) - 10:46, 15 December 2019
  • ...st others to pass, move or otherwise deploy objects. In order to get these objects to or from the requestee, requesters need to manipulate them, for example b
    2 KB (335 words) - 11:16, 24 June 2020
  • ...is paper considers a recent and growing body of research into turn-initial objects, and describes some of the difficulties associated with their analysis. It
    886 bytes (117 words) - 06:48, 10 October 2016
  • ...lly was a good method for beginners”: How narratives are used to situate objects and techniques in a quilting guild ...arratives argumentatively to support specific characterizations of quilted objects and quilting techniques. In the data, situating narratives initiate an inte
    1 KB (204 words) - 14:28, 1 March 2016
  • ...a setting where participants deal with the intentional status of designed objects. It is argued that the analyzed assessment sequences are shaped and organiz
    2 KB (236 words) - 14:20, 1 March 2016
  • ...age with other semiotic resources for embodied action, including space and objects. Much of this expansion has been driven by applied work. ...g the role of multilingualism, standard social science methods as research objects, CA's potential for direct social intervention, and increasing efforts to c
    2 KB (273 words) - 09:26, 11 December 2019
  • ...ter claims to ideas, and it was the uptake of the game and the use of play objects by others that led to whether the idea of game category was upheld. This an
    2 KB (234 words) - 03:33, 27 February 2016
  • ...its some kind of potential transgression (e.g., breaking wind, standing on objects on the floor, or playing in a proscribed location). The child's mother then
    1 KB (191 words) - 14:52, 2 March 2016
  • |Title=Responsibility and action: invariants and diversity in requests for objects in British English and Polish interaction
    1 KB (151 words) - 05:40, 26 February 2016
  • ...discussion of both cases concerns how specimens are modified into `docile objects' for purposes of investigation. These modifications are summarized under th
    2 KB (212 words) - 00:42, 21 October 2019
  • ...tting’s endogenous tasks, competent courses of action and organizational objects could possibly be. The promise is that just what is identifying of social o
    1 KB (189 words) - 05:24, 26 February 2016
  • ...encies to be dealt with. We show that participants' use of space, material objects, and the positioning of bodies in the prebeginnings of request turns (i.e.,
    1 KB (158 words) - 14:06, 25 February 2016
  • |Title=Some ‘technical challenges’ of video analysis: social actions, objects, material realities and the problems of perspective |Tag(s)=EMCA; Video; Objects;
    2 KB (247 words) - 09:56, 30 November 2019
  • ...central mechanism by which ideas are transformed into designed, real-world objects. Using data collected during an ethnographic study of a design studio in Sw
    2 KB (247 words) - 13:32, 25 February 2016
  • ...traints of the car (i.e., seating arrangements, the rear-view mirror), and objects brought into the car such as a mobile phone.
    2 KB (252 words) - 08:32, 23 September 2018
  • ...in co-present interaction, requests characteristically deal with concrete objects and events in the immediate semiotic environment and with present activitie
    2 KB (241 words) - 15:09, 23 February 2016
  • ...is overall position. The Red comprises just one part of a theory of social objects that Garfinkel began crafting at Harvard in 1946. The Red is the third in a
    991 bytes (147 words) - 00:46, 15 June 2020
  • |Title=Affectivity in Interaction: Sound Objects in English ...provides evidence that the sound pattern and sequential placement of sound objects systematically contribute to their specific meaning-making in interaction,
    1 KB (189 words) - 06:29, 30 November 2019
  • |Tag(s)=Deixis; EMCA; Objects; Referential practice; Social interaction; Work; Workplace Studies ...h colleagues establish, if only momentarily, mutual orientation towards ‘objects’, such as (features of) documents and computer screens. The paper address
    1 KB (195 words) - 07:33, 8 April 2021
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Professional vision; Action; Community; Objects; Material culture; ...ns subject to their professional scrutiny. The shaping process creates the objects of knowledge that become the insignia of a profession’s craft: the theori
    1 KB (144 words) - 11:38, 15 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Objects; Procedure work; Medical EMCA; ...-surgery. We argue that procedure both determines and is determined by its objects.
    2 KB (296 words) - 12:51, 27 November 2019
  • ...ations of this distribution and how the basic meanings of these linguistic objects are employed in the service of communicating interpersonal involvement.
    1 KB (145 words) - 11:25, 13 November 2019
  • ...ivities accomplished by participants by referring to these embarrassing’ objects. In the discussion we propose that the analytical underestimation of the ro
    2 KB (240 words) - 10:41, 16 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Context; Home environment; Material objects; Multimodality; Requests; Timing
    2 KB (247 words) - 04:28, 13 December 2019
  • ..., have to negotiate, determine and redefine the material properties of the objects they are in charge of. Drawing on materials collected through an ethnograph
    2 KB (385 words) - 01:56, 19 January 2020
  • |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity ...re not done on talk but on actions and materials involved in the making of objects.
    1 KB (183 words) - 10:15, 11 December 2019
  • |Title=Cultivating objects in interaction: Visual motifs as meaning making practices |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects; Visual
    1 KB (187 words) - 09:47, 11 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects; Couselling ...ruct such sequentially relevant action. Particularly, we focus here on how objects in the material surround are used in conjunction with talk, gaze and postur
    2 KB (332 words) - 12:19, 11 March 2016
  • ...rimental data. Their gestural engagements are seen as dynamical phenomenal objects enacted at the junction between the digital world of technology and the wor
    1 KB (147 words) - 01:57, 21 November 2019
  • ...space-time which develops collaboration and alliances, and where technical objects evolve. Within and through these demonstration situations, we see an evolut
    2 KB (369 words) - 12:02, 27 December 2019
  • ...r those beginning with specific wh-words and targeting prior references to objects or phenomena (i.e., non-person entities). In both languages, the specific r
    2 KB (249 words) - 11:48, 15 December 2019
  • |Title=Embodying epistemicity: Negotiating (un)certainty through semiotic objects ...nteractants for dealing with the objects, the patterns of actions in which objects are involved their relevance for negotiating the certainty of information.
    2 KB (210 words) - 01:42, 17 November 2014
  • |Title=Formulations as conversational objects
    345 bytes (40 words) - 00:13, 28 October 2019
  • ...n point, she details how seminar presenters interact with the audience and objects around them to produce a coherent whole. Through detailed examination of ta
    1 KB (165 words) - 09:13, 13 November 2019
  • ...in everyday talk-in-interaction; 6. Research practices and methodological objects; 7. Learning how to repair; 8. Learning what not to say: repression and int
    2 KB (270 words) - 09:48, 16 December 2019
  • |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    478 bytes (58 words) - 09:25, 9 December 2019
  • |Title=Initiating activity shifts through use of appraisal forms as material objects during performance appraisal interviews |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    1 KB (192 words) - 09:18, 9 December 2019
  • |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity ...the objects they manipulate; the third reveals the normative way in which objects are expected to be transformed.
    1 KB (218 words) - 09:16, 9 December 2019
  • |Title=On the interactional ecology of objects |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects;
    2 KB (220 words) - 09:05, 9 December 2019
  • |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity ...his chapter focuses on how doctors, during consultations, use computers as objects that serve diagnostic purposes. Specifically, the chapter investigates inst
    2 KB (243 words) - 12:24, 7 December 2019
  • ...e: Participants’ orientation to impending sound when turning on auditory objects in interaction |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    1 KB (171 words) - 11:40, 7 December 2019
  • |Title=Objects as tools for talk |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects
    485 bytes (60 words) - 05:13, 12 August 2020
  • |Title=Establishing joint orientation towards commercial objects in a self-service store: How practices of categorisation matter |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    561 bytes (68 words) - 05:14, 12 August 2020
  • ...'well''-prefaces"). However, prefaces can and should be distinguished from objects that are recognizably part of the TCU (such as a ''wh''-word) and are recog
    3 KB (416 words) - 20:55, 22 December 2023
  • |Title=Having a ball: Immaterial objects in dance instruction |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    494 bytes (60 words) - 05:04, 12 August 2020
  • |Title=Interacting with Objects: language, Materiality, and Social Activity ...g on objects in and for actual occasions of human action, Interacting with Objects: Language, materiality, and social activity will interest many researchers
    2 KB (243 words) - 06:08, 6 December 2019
  • ...gical comparison comparing formal features of autonomous and fixed textual objects, but a characteristic of transcribing as a situated practice. Practices are
    2 KB (225 words) - 00:49, 18 November 2019
  • ...hem as the stronger type of response to extended descriptions of copresent objects. They also orient to this interactional metric in sequences of assessments,
    2 KB (354 words) - 13:52, 24 November 2019
  • |Title=Interweaving Objects, Gestures, and Talk in Context ...ysis, and actor-network theory. After a brief presentation of the place of objects and artifacts in these ways of approaching action and human cognition, we s
    1 KB (169 words) - 07:28, 10 August 2016
  • |Title=Instructed objects |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    2 KB (238 words) - 09:58, 9 December 2019
  • |Title=Artworks as touchable objects: Guiding perception in a museum tour for blind people |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    1 KB (163 words) - 09:55, 9 December 2019
  • ...activities carried out with an array of artifacts, involve a multitude of objects and actors, and amount to the management of multiple parallel tasks. In ATC
    2 KB (262 words) - 05:58, 6 December 2019
  • ...nduct with and around the simulator; the practical ways in which hand held objects are exchanged in the course of pedagogic discussions; how tactile skills an ...hanics, and the interactive work by which these competencies are made into objects of learning and instruction. The fourth study investigates episodes where e
    302 KB (44,160 words) - 09:22, 20 December 2023
  • ...Turn-Taking and Its Relationships to Verbal Turn-Taking in the Transfer of Objects
    1 KB (230 words) - 20:57, 29 December 2022
  • ...embodied actions, namely to publicly accountable ways of sensing material objects, to ways of showing and addressing an audience, and to visible ways of refe
    2 KB (228 words) - 21:11, 29 December 2022
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Workplace; Objects; Artefacts; Cues; Affordance |Abstract=The everyday use of objects, placed in a workspace, can play the role of a
    837 bytes (126 words) - 05:45, 16 October 2017
  • ...wing field of multimodal conversation analytic work on space, mobility and objects in interaction as resources for participants’ ongoing sense-making practi
    1 KB (177 words) - 05:58, 6 December 2019
  • ...workplaces and car driving. With the companion collection Interacting with Objects: Language, materiality, and social activity, the book advances understandin
    2 KB (236 words) - 09:53, 11 December 2019
  • ...articular, we demonstrate how adults initiate imaginary transformations of objects while displaying an orientation to a general order of make-believe in which
    1 KB (143 words) - 03:47, 7 May 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Garfinkel; Winch; Wittgenstein; Durkheim; social objects; constitutive rules; constitutive practices; mutual attention; rules; rule ...Garfinkel ([1948]2006) to “mean”. Explaining the consistency of social objects and orders in terms of constitutive orders, rules, or practices is an appro
    2 KB (267 words) - 13:10, 20 February 2016
  • ...nts of everyday activities such as navigating in public space, identifying objects and obstacles, being included in workplace activities, interacting with gui ...igating, for interpreting embodied cues, or for identifying or recognizing objects. Other sensory resources and other practices are employed to accomplish the
    3 KB (392 words) - 03:53, 8 December 2023
  • |Booktitle=Interacting with Objects: Language, Materiality, and Social Activity
    1 KB (185 words) - 11:18, 11 December 2019
  • ...n, the analysis illustrates why and how certain linguistic elements become objects of language learning in everyday interaction and informs our understanding
    1 KB (198 words) - 11:15, 11 March 2016
  • ...es of literary criticism and the lessons it taught about relating cultural objects to context, I turn to more recent work on talk-in-interaction and engage th
    2 KB (230 words) - 23:57, 26 October 2019
  • ...ge structure, prosody, and visible embodied displays. Semiotically charged objects, such as maps, when included within local action, incorporate ways of knowi
    2 KB (327 words) - 10:40, 1 December 2019
  • |Title=The mystery of the missing referent: objects, procedures, and the problem of the instruction follower ...understanding of that work's organization. The practices of instantiating objects and followintg procedures are foundational to that organization. This paper
    1 KB (206 words) - 10:16, 13 November 2019
  • ...mis)use, here I explore how the new public health works up its behavioural objects using the example of tobacco use. Beginning with the work of counting smoke
    2 KB (311 words) - 09:02, 28 November 2019
  • .... The embodied and situated reasoning that enabled radiologists to discern objects in the images thus display expertise as inherently practical and domain-spe
    2 KB (262 words) - 07:08, 28 November 2019
  • ...is particular context and more generally on the highways, road users treat objects such as road signs and related items of roadside furniture, including camer
    2 KB (292 words) - 13:13, 3 November 2019
  • ...ies reporting the social construction and effects of a variety of material objects as well as studies that have explored the material dimensions of a diversit
    2 KB (321 words) - 09:54, 11 December 2019
  • ...wider social conditions and constraints that impact upon the practices and objects of design.
    1 KB (175 words) - 04:04, 20 January 2016
  • ...CA; Identity; Lesbian; Gaze; Multimodal; Action; Gay; Sequential Analysis; Objects; Touch; Racism
    2 KB (376 words) - 08:49, 11 June 2020
  • ...e features (including gaze, posture, gesture and involvement with material objects) and technical phonetic analysis. A range of phonetic and visible features
    1 KB (162 words) - 04:52, 30 November 2019
  • ...rplay between their verbal requests and their manual manipulation of these objects. Our analysis shows that customers coming to the shoe repair shop enact an
    1 KB (207 words) - 09:49, 16 December 2019
  • ...ntify and focus on how physiotherapists made use of patients’ resources (objects, conditions, personal characteristics and energies). The findings reveal va
    2 KB (213 words) - 04:19, 17 October 2019
  • ...s or group, but also involves reciprocal performances in which the counted objects are complicit in, or resistive to, the social production of counts. Variabl
    2 KB (289 words) - 10:29, 23 November 2019
  • ...en" world. It is argued that we inhabit a palpable material environment of objects which has consequences for and impinges upon aspects of our practical decis
    1 KB (162 words) - 09:57, 27 October 2015
  • ...especially those involving demonstrative expressions. Referring to present objects constitutes an embedded action sequence, in which different practices provi
    2 KB (235 words) - 12:25, 23 November 2019
  • ...tertain the possibility that they are experiencing anomalous or paranormal objects and entities. The analysis outlines the basic features of the transgressive
    1 KB (189 words) - 11:28, 15 December 2019
  • |Title=Assessing mutable objects: A Multimodal analysis |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects; Multimodal; Assessments; Clothing
    1 KB (198 words) - 09:32, 23 December 2015
  • ...rdinated gaze, gesture, and language to make relevant particular perceived objects from the built environment for accomplishing the groups’ goal-directed ac
    2 KB (225 words) - 02:21, 19 January 2020
  • ...pcoming events, (ii) building a mutual pretend understanding of places and objects that were used to configure nearness as well as distance in the girls’ in
    2 KB (312 words) - 09:53, 30 December 2015
  • ...it expressions of power and resistance and externally available discursive objects. Through example extracts we illustrate how this framework can be employed
    1 KB (188 words) - 13:08, 30 December 2015
  • ...He does not deny the reality of things but argues that their appearance as objects on any particular occasion is socially constructed. He shows us familiar or
    2 KB (257 words) - 00:53, 21 November 2019
  • |Abstract=Patients in hospitals are often treated as objects without regard for their subjective sense of self. The following narrative
    1 KB (135 words) - 10:55, 13 November 2019
  • ...nderlying regularities, the “visual grammar,” according to which these objects are assembled. While most existing studies base their analysis on products The particular objects analyzed are storyboards that were produced by secondary school pupils usin
    1 KB (182 words) - 08:26, 4 December 2019
  • ...ce. In the following chapters, the reader will find descriptions of social objects that appear in a court of law, and in settings that involve what we like to
    2 KB (358 words) - 02:12, 21 October 2023
  • ...hment of owner and dog methodically displaying intent and producing social objects.
    1 KB (193 words) - 08:10, 11 August 2016
  • |Title=The region in the boot: mobilising lone subjects and multiple objects |Tag(s)=EMCA; space; regions; objects
    2 KB (317 words) - 02:25, 31 October 2019
  • ...perience of works of art is not a subjective and cognitive response to the objects, but arises in and through socially organised, embodied practices at the ex
    2 KB (245 words) - 13:38, 24 November 2019
  • ...interpreted as happening in spatially arranged constellations of material objects and actors. In these both rigid and flexible constellations boundaries are
    1 KB (200 words) - 12:13, 23 November 2019
  • ...oaches which treat social categories as routine, mundane and unproblematic objects, we demonstrate the local construction of category memberships and their pr
    2 KB (339 words) - 08:46, 11 June 2020
  • |Booktitle=Sociological Objects: Reconfigurations of Social Theory
    385 bytes (49 words) - 10:33, 23 November 2019
  • ...only of prisons or similar institutions. This study advises that inanimate objects and the spaces that comprise them are informative for and relevant to behav
    1 KB (198 words) - 11:35, 3 November 2019
  • ...participants’ emerging grammar to understand how they orient to learning objects as resources for doing language learning behaviors that occur both in the m
    1 KB (174 words) - 12:54, 20 November 2019
  • ...es are there in the world waiting to be counted, I propose that particular objects are constituted as such while they are counted. As the chromosome story dem
    1 KB (218 words) - 01:13, 1 November 2019
  • ...y be elicited and organized, power moves, and people may be constructed as objects of power. The article thus serves as an initial attempt to synthesize stran
    2 KB (217 words) - 13:50, 17 June 2017
  • |Title=It's a Nice Idea, but It's Not Actually Real: Assessing the Objects and Activities of Design
    1 KB (155 words) - 04:03, 20 January 2016
  • ...e researchers and the dialectical immersion-distancing with regards to the objects being studied will be discussed. The aim of this article is to show the the
    1 KB (169 words) - 04:42, 21 January 2016
  • |Booktitle=Sociological Objects: Reconfigurations of Social Theory
    415 bytes (53 words) - 02:05, 22 January 2016
  • ...s and procedures according to which the individual interprets the world of objects. Thus, what sociologists utilize as resources for their investigations beco
    1 KB (140 words) - 02:26, 22 January 2016
  • |Title=The Changing Meanings of Things: Found Objects and Inscriptions in Social Interaction |Tag(s)=EMCA; objects;
    414 bytes (56 words) - 04:54, 22 January 2016
  • ...e of informal documents. Making explicit the ties that exist between these objects and the worlds in which they are embedded demonstrates that informal docume
    2 KB (257 words) - 12:16, 20 November 2019
  • ...e problem’ on which they are working in the ways they produce whiteboard objects and text postings. Solutions emerge as students come to understand the prob
    1 KB (172 words) - 10:54, 1 December 2019
  • ...nt and timing within the flow of talk. This book summarises eight of these objects, and explores one, mm, in depth.
    1 KB (187 words) - 12:37, 29 October 2019
  • ...ameworks and intense focus clusters. Talk and embodied actions (the use of objects, body orientations, and the structure of the environment) are revealed as s
    2 KB (212 words) - 09:15, 17 August 2016
  • |Booktitle=Sociological Objects: Reconfigurations of Social Theory
    376 bytes (44 words) - 06:27, 7 February 2016
  • ...dal (that is: involving language, gesture, gaze, body postures, movements, objects manipulations and arrangements of bodies in space). This chapter explores s
    1 KB (175 words) - 13:06, 25 December 2019
  • ...d from this corpus are analyzed multimodally to show how talk, images, and objects operate discursively to construct a dialog on class. Drawing from theories
    2 KB (236 words) - 10:17, 11 December 2019
  • ...objects; constitutive practices; ethnomethodology; Garfinkel; information objects; information systems; social facts; workplace studies; ...and their situated character in achieving information objects—and social objects more generally—could change the team's perception of their options.
    2 KB (269 words) - 02:06, 15 December 2019
  • ...to the test questions: responding verbally, pointing or manually handling objects. The tester treated these responses differently depending on how they were
    3 KB (456 words) - 13:42, 26 December 2019
  • |Title=Configuring action in objects: from mutual spaces to media spaces |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects; Action;
    2 KB (219 words) - 12:01, 27 October 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Art; Museums; Objects; ...tors to museums and galleries and consider how they examine and experience objects and artefacts in collaboration with each other. In particular, we address t
    1 KB (171 words) - 04:36, 1 November 2019
  • ...e in the same space), reflexively constitute the sense and significance of objects and artefacts, and the ways in which those material features reflexively in
    2 KB (230 words) - 03:28, 30 October 2019
  • ...episodes differ in terms of the participants’ manipulatory access to the objects: in the first instance, the ‘explainer’, when textualising his explanat
    2 KB (252 words) - 01:26, 27 December 2019
  • 4) using objects as resources for entry.
    2 KB (362 words) - 06:40, 13 September 2023
  • ...riety of tools including language, body orientation, gesture, prosody, and objects. Data for the study come from a corpus of over 70 hours of videotaped inter
    3 KB (386 words) - 03:56, 27 December 2019
  • ...ting (talk/embodied conduct) and endurable resources (e.g. manipulation of objects) to accomplish a stage play which has a defined shape. In doing this, parti
    1 KB (182 words) - 02:03, 12 January 2020
  • ...ten do not accompany stand alone laughter; (b) are discrete and targetable objects; (c) are not propositional; (d) can be used with little disruption of deliv
    2 KB (254 words) - 13:30, 24 November 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects;
    360 bytes (44 words) - 10:59, 22 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Computer-mediated communication; Virtual collaboration; Objects; ...roblems due to “fragmented” views of embodiments in relation to shared objects; participants compensating with spoken accounts of their actions; and diffi
    1 KB (185 words) - 11:55, 27 October 2019
  • ...haring the tools of the trade: the interactional constitution of workplace objects |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects; Workplace; Collaboration;
    1 KB (173 words) - 11:53, 27 October 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Embodied interaction; Objects;
    345 bytes (42 words) - 05:44, 31 October 2019
  • ...gh their interaction with others, make sense of an assembly of traditional objects and video technologies. The analysis focuses on the organised practices of
    2 KB (257 words) - 16:09, 4 October 2016
  • ...ge structure, prosody, and visible embodied displays. Semiotically charged objects, such as maps, when included within local action, incorporate ways of knowi
    2 KB (331 words) - 01:51, 27 December 2019
  • ...ed and verbal behavior in the management of joint activities with material objects ...ity-management moves at different phases of joint activities with material objects. On the basis of our analysis, we suggest that, at all phases of such activ
    2 KB (262 words) - 11:26, 22 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=Change-of-state; Danish; Visual perception; Objects; EMCA
    2 KB (230 words) - 01:24, 27 December 2019
  • ...s to examine these expectancies or sets of commonsense knowledge as social objects produced during talk by exploring the ways in which talk “index[es] or co
    1 KB (186 words) - 10:28, 25 December 2019
  • |Title=Why are increments such elusive objects? An afterthought
    845 bytes (120 words) - 10:23, 19 November 2019
  • ...of spoken interaction. They argue that spoken words are, in fact, temporal objects and that unless linguists consider how they are delivered within the contex
    856 bytes (120 words) - 06:39, 19 October 2019
  • ...familiar household objects, such as hammocks and beds, to high-technology objects, such as delivery tables and fetal monitors, significant changes occur in t
    1 KB (200 words) - 08:32, 21 October 2019
  • |Title=Talking about skill: making objects, technologies and communities visible |Tag(s)=EMCA; Workplace studies; Skill; Objects; Technology; Community;
    1 KB (154 words) - 05:38, 31 October 2019
  • ...re indeed times that Peony’s effort is oriented toward specific learning objects, much of her effort is exerted towards other situated identities such as be
    1 KB (201 words) - 12:05, 27 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; Children; Shows; Joint Attention; Objects; ...e center) track the activities of others for felicitous moments to present objects, and design and position their actions by reference to the ongoing preoccup
    1 KB (210 words) - 13:03, 18 November 2019
  • ...plays of knowing and displays of understanding are different interactional objects that come in different sequential positions. In the second place, it argues
    1 KB (135 words) - 11:38, 25 November 2019
  • ...e translations, transformations and transportations of documents as 'quasi-objects' through several orderings, the article suggests that documents have no ess
    2 KB (246 words) - 04:58, 9 December 2017
  • ...to see. Spoken interactions are not always stable enough to demarcate the objects of learning for theoretical predictions or pedagogical prescriptions, parti
    2 KB (229 words) - 11:36, 25 November 2019
  • ...uction is described. List construction can be used to formulate a class of objects through an inductive procedure by moving from the particular to the general
    2 KB (233 words) - 01:35, 24 October 2019
  • |Title=Showing objects in Skype video-mediated conversations: From showing gestures to showing seq ...count for the recurrent production of showing sequences involving personal objects (which index familiar and intimate territories) in video-mediated interpers
    2 KB (212 words) - 11:40, 9 February 2017
  • ...or digitally anonymising voices, bodies, semiotic landscapes, settings and objects
    6 KB (766 words) - 19:06, 9 February 2017
  • ...l by consciously, systematically, and collaboratively manipulating them as objects and patterns. When conceptualizing language as both action and game from th
    1 KB (161 words) - 01:04, 27 December 2019
  • .... The main findings of this research study focus on: (i) the ways in which objects and technologies provide resources for initiating interaction; (ii) the dis
    3 KB (446 words) - 13:22, 11 February 2017
  • ...conduct, sequential analysis of multimodal actions, participants’ use of objects in a socio-material world, and/or subtle phenomena like emotions and cognit
    3 KB (465 words) - 22:48, 19 February 2017
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects;
    476 bytes (62 words) - 01:49, 12 October 2022
  • |Title=Children’s use of objects in an early years playground |Tag(s)=Objects; child-peer interactions; social organisation; Play; social organisation of
    1 KB (198 words) - 04:38, 26 September 2023
  • ...ities. However, the mode of administration, the timing, and the use of the objects involved are constrained. ...actions required to administer the item. The analysis also shows that the objects constituting the test item did not suggest to the child a unique course of
    3 KB (378 words) - 19:11, 19 March 2017
  • ...hanics; and the interactive work by which these competencies are made into objects of learning and instruction.
    2 KB (249 words) - 11:17, 23 November 2019
  • ...vely little attention has been given to the technical detail of the social objects of the sciences. That detail, and the ordinariness of that detail, establis
    938 bytes (133 words) - 00:38, 20 October 2019
  • |Tag(s)=Action formation; Objects in interaction; Multimodality; Social epistemics; Classroom interaction; Le ...n by investigating how embodied interactional practices involving material objects relate to the organization of social action. Using as data information requ
    2 KB (244 words) - 10:59, 15 December 2019
  • |Title=Material texts as objects in interaction – constraints and possibilities in relation to dialogic re ...n classrooms as task work is organized around texts that are also material objects.
    2 KB (239 words) - 12:34, 4 October 2018
  • ...for the participants' themselves, in coordinating action with and through objects. We then consider these issues with regard to interaction and collaboration
    2 KB (246 words) - 02:19, 31 October 2019
  • ...hin an ethnomethodological framework, an attempt is made to approach these objects by examining them in the context of interactional details in naturally occu
    2 KB (220 words) - 00:21, 22 October 2019
  • ...lized retina: Selection and mathematization in the visual documentation of objects in the life sciences |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Objects; Documents; Selection; Mathematics;
    436 bytes (54 words) - 09:57, 21 October 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Sacrifice; Objects; Neuroscience
    2 KB (227 words) - 09:56, 21 October 2019
  • |Title=Pictures, texts, and objects: the literary language game of birdwatching |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Pictures; Text; Objects; Birdwatching
    365 bytes (46 words) - 06:01, 19 October 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Classroom interactions; Material objects;
    436 bytes (47 words) - 02:51, 23 October 2019
  • ...sroom addresses the following question: How are the familiar instructional objects called problems, answers, errors, and solutions made visible to the cohort?
    1 KB (169 words) - 01:53, 24 October 2019
  • |Title=Showing Objects: Holding and Manipulating Artefacts in Video-mediated Collaborative Setting ...)=EMCA; Skype; Video-mediated interaction; domestic; embodied interaction; objects
    2 KB (273 words) - 02:33, 9 May 2017
  • ...g., the natural habitat of language and grammars as positionally sensitive objects. The conclusion is that Manny Schegloff has contributed, if unwittingly, to
    1 KB (189 words) - 04:29, 26 September 2023
  • ...odological and conversation analytic approach to the assembly of cognitive objects. It is important to reverse the usual social psychological metalanguage of
    1 KB (192 words) - 09:56, 13 November 2019
  • ...f a broad range of semiotic resources (such as embodied actions, mobility, objects) in order to achieve social actions. This workshop will discuss the opportu
    2 KB (322 words) - 14:09, 19 June 2017
  • ...in the way they approached the vendor, produced verbal accounts, recovered objects from their person, shaped to pass money and so on. Delicate interactional p
    1 KB (143 words) - 12:25, 28 November 2019
  • ...of the physical structure of the environment, the arrangement of physical objects within the environment and the physical placement of people are all examine
    1 KB (168 words) - 14:55, 30 June 2017
  • ...tions in practices and charting their association with specific topics and objects.
    2 KB (303 words) - 01:20, 31 October 2019
  • ...ciating requires participation in both a real world of physical events and objects, and a social world of subjective identifications. Second, we explore the c
    1 KB (182 words) - 06:44, 20 October 2019
  • ...mplemented by descriptive definitions and the enactment of the handling of objects. The definitions provided do not purport to be context-free definitions of
    2 KB (350 words) - 03:47, 27 December 2019
  • ...and focus groups has been characterized by a shift toward treating them as objects of inquiry in their own right, rather than simply as data collection instru
    2 KB (205 words) - 01:29, 31 March 2018
  • |Title=Turning down sound to turn to talk: Muting and muffling auditory objects as a resource for displaying involvement |Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; British English; Danish; auditory objects; involvement;
    1 KB (162 words) - 01:23, 27 December 2019
  • ...talk have significant, culture-wide, formal structures that are the proper objects of the discipline. Or, in Sacks’s own terms, seemingly insignificant mund
    2 KB (277 words) - 11:23, 3 November 2019
  • ...oral and spatial restraint that involve embodied (inter)action, furniture, objects, and the lived architecture of the domestic sphere.
    2 KB (252 words) - 10:26, 23 November 2019
  • ...– involves a range of very different methods. When referring to physical objects or processes in face-to-face interaction, people may choose from a variety
    2 KB (233 words) - 12:50, 20 November 2019
  • ...t but is also a product of and resource for group interaction; second, the objects of imaginative thought are not necessarily mental images, but can potential
    2 KB (213 words) - 11:19, 3 November 2019
  • ...nd obligations in and through relational categorisations of road users and objects, their actions, and visually available resources, in relation to the ‘pro
    2 KB (220 words) - 02:58, 4 September 2023
  • ...ct=This chapter examines interactional dimensions of requests for material objects and other immediate practical actions in Russian conversation, focusing on
    2 KB (280 words) - 11:18, 28 December 2019
  • ...n a linguistic context, but they are not normally thought of as linguistic objects: rather they are at the boundary of language and paralanguage, or non-langu
    3 KB (384 words) - 13:41, 17 July 2018
  • * Laurier, Eric. 2013. “Noticing: Talk, Gestures, Movement and Objects in Video Analysis.” In The SAGE Handbook of Human Geography, edited by Ro
    6 KB (806 words) - 13:41, 17 July 2018
  • ...how actions are accomplished through the construction and manipulation of objects.
    2 KB (269 words) - 11:41, 28 December 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; fieldwork; ethnomethodology; system design; boundary objects; information systems; ...in the recognizability of objects and information across domains: boundary objects. Meaning treated as a property of situated order - not of semantics or defi
    1 KB (189 words) - 04:02, 23 November 2019
  • ...another’s diverse perspectives and representations of the scene and its objects and events. Diagnosis requires participants to manage situations of ambigui
    2 KB (315 words) - 08:23, 23 November 2019
  • ...organize the gathering of information on the medical problem, while using objects such as a computer mouse, a keyboard, notebooks.
    2 KB (298 words) - 08:42, 20 October 2017
  • |Title=Showing ‘digital' objects in web-based video chats as a collaborative achievement |Abstract=Showing material objects by bringing them to the camera or turning the camera toward them are pervas
    2 KB (222 words) - 11:09, 28 December 2019
  • 4 KB (579 words) - 15:00, 12 June 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; objects
    405 bytes (55 words) - 00:58, 24 October 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Automobiles; Material objects; Materiality; Tactile; Gesture;
    1 KB (209 words) - 10:04, 29 October 2017
  • ...this problem and examines the role of algorithms not as techno-scientific objects to be known, but as a figure that is used for making sense of observations.
    2 KB (264 words) - 10:00, 12 May 2023
  • ...l in each setting? Furthermore, how can we grasp the sociality of material objects that are often taken for granted and that drift in and out of view? We addr
    2 KB (207 words) - 06:19, 13 January 2020
  • ...ganization) that give structure to interactional situations. Their primary objects of study are different. For the Balesian tradition, it is the functioning a
    2 KB (305 words) - 18:42, 27 November 2017
  • ...ganised through the participants’ emergent orientations to interactional objects, which include English text and talk, in their own actions. The interaction
    2 KB (239 words) - 08:17, 25 November 2019
  • ...ground activities and package-by-package analysis turning attention to new objects of observation in therapeutic conversation (allusions, metaphorical framing
    2 KB (268 words) - 04:32, 26 September 2023
  • ...ment, where participants’ use of language, embodied actions and material objects are variously combined to build coherent courses of action (Goodwin 2000).
    2 KB (251 words) - 10:20, 9 December 2019
  • ...ast two sources have not been much described in the existing literature on objects of learning. Through detailed analyses of video recorded classroom interact
    2 KB (248 words) - 09:51, 30 November 2019
  • ...Epistemic positioning and frameworks for participation: Learning to assess objects of craft in teacher education
    2 KB (233 words) - 07:00, 5 December 2019
  • ...lower (feet, legs, posterior) parts of the body, haptic contacts touching objects and coparticipants, and camera movements. The precise transcription of rele
    2 KB (219 words) - 03:18, 11 January 2020
  • |Title=Objects of Cooperation: An Experience of Moving House
    383 bytes (48 words) - 03:54, 6 April 2018
  • ...n essay on two conceptions of social order: constitutive orders of action, objects and identities vs aggregated orders of individual action
    1 KB (178 words) - 04:01, 23 November 2019
  • ...le=Configuring materiality, mobility, and multiactivity: interactions with objects in cars ...=EMCA; cars; driving; materiality; mobility; participation; multiactivity; objects
    2 KB (260 words) - 12:13, 12 January 2020
  • ...ion, it has been Garfinkel's proposal that mutual understanding (orienting objects, meaning, and identities) in interactions, including technical situations o
    2 KB (262 words) - 12:32, 20 November 2019
  • ...n German classrooms, children are regularly instructed to look at familiar objects – words – in a new fashion, to acquire knowledge about their phonetic f
    2 KB (241 words) - 05:33, 13 January 2020
  • |Title=Using physical objects with young children in ‘face-to-face’ and telehealth speech and languag ...and clients. The aim of our reported study was to understand how physical objects such as toys are used in similar and different ways across videoconferenced
    2 KB (266 words) - 12:12, 10 October 2019
  • ...l troubles reveal the ‘hidden’ taken-for-granted details of how social objects and identities are cooperatively achieved in interaction and document how i
    2 KB (248 words) - 09:10, 17 February 2021
  • ...rstandings. An innovative study of the social character of such management objects as spreadsheets, strategic plans, computational models and charts, Action a
    2 KB (205 words) - 03:16, 14 January 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects in interaction; Child-parent-interaction; Request sequences; Third position ...e explored which are initiated by either child requests or adult offers of objects. The focus is on those sequences in which the child does not want an object
    2 KB (209 words) - 00:52, 24 October 2019
  • ...embodied interaction for encouraging a multisensory engagement with museum objects and artefacts on display, by means of focusing on the subtleties of devisin
    2 KB (262 words) - 03:54, 27 December 2019
  • ...ilingual are accomplished through a remarkably common set of interactional objects and actions, whose sequential organisations are quite similar across langua
    3 KB (371 words) - 01:54, 14 January 2020
  • ...focuses on the procedural production of ‘discourse objects’ (formative objects) in legal, administrative and political sites as members’ work. The metho
    2 KB (246 words) - 04:50, 13 January 2020
  • ...zations of the body within a spatial and material setting. One place where objects are continuously passed is at the optician. Based on more than 700 hours of
    1 KB (182 words) - 02:00, 14 January 2020
  • ...actional competence to L2 interactional repertoires: reconceptualising the objects of L2 learning ...eractional repertoires as a more empirically useful concept to capture the objects of L2 learning. Its usefulness is twofold. First, it more aptly captures th
    1 KB (192 words) - 06:38, 13 January 2020
  • |Title=Troublesome objects: unpacking ocular-centrism in urban environments by studying blind navigati ...c bias and suggests the need for a more granular understanding of physical objects and tactile experiences in future developments of a sociology of space.
    2 KB (238 words) - 03:48, 19 January 2020
  • ...study embodiment in space and time in three distinct types of situations: objects in space, complex participation frameworks, and affiliation and alignment.
    1 KB (198 words) - 03:36, 16 January 2020
  • ...particular features that suggest its categorization as part of a class of objects. Blind children, however, must effectively and productively constitute the
    2 KB (283 words) - 02:52, 16 January 2020
  • 2 KB (211 words) - 10:09, 17 January 2020
  • |Title=Inspecting objects: visibility manoeuvres in laparoscopic surgery
    1 KB (169 words) - 04:10, 19 January 2020
  • ...where typical actions, such as noticing, assessing, evaluating and buying objects, occur, shopping together constitutes a complex activity which requires an
    2 KB (219 words) - 01:15, 16 January 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Family; Recruitment; Updating; Objects; Children ...ent and child monitoring of apposite object identification in reference to objects/items. Findings indicate that there is an ongoing monitoring of object iden
    2 KB (312 words) - 02:40, 16 January 2020
  • ...needed to better capture current understandings of language knowledge and objects of L2 learning, I offer repertoire, semiotic resources, and register as alt
    2 KB (263 words) - 02:29, 19 January 2020
  • ...ight psychotherapy as a visible process. On the whole, these interactional objects enable the psychiatrist to constitute the psychiatric interview as a self-e
    2 KB (246 words) - 07:10, 28 November 2019
  • ...th the questioner and the addressee. They must be produced as recognizable objects and must be comprehended by taking into account the context in which they o
    2 KB (234 words) - 03:33, 18 October 2019
  • ...tively and materially reconfigured. Contrary to the apparent enlivening of objects promised by the sciences of the artificial, the author proposes that the rh
    1 KB (190 words) - 07:33, 17 November 2019
  • ...rspectives. My account emphasizes the multiplicity of media and associated objects involved in the work of engineering on the one hand, and their integration
    1 KB (186 words) - 11:27, 27 October 2019
  • |Title=Affiliative objects ...on of objects and persons. This perspective emphasizes the multiplicity of objects within the unfolding and uncertain trajectories of organizational life, as
    1 KB (156 words) - 10:33, 3 November 2019
  • ...ggest that an analysis of fine details of seemingly simple activities with objects may have implications for our understanding of collaborative work, and a on
    2 KB (237 words) - 07:32, 17 November 2019
  • |Title=Visible objects of concern: Issues and challenges for workplace ethnographies in complex en
    2 KB (255 words) - 12:06, 16 October 2019
  • |Title=Rethinking bodies and objects in social interaction: a multimodal and multisensorial approach to tasting ...ectivity, in which bodies sense other bodies sensing, and align with other objects within various spatial and material configurations.
    2 KB (297 words) - 10:06, 17 January 2020
  • |Title=Spatiotemporal arrangement of objects in activities with people with dementia |Tag(s)=EMCA; Spatiotemporal organization; Artifacts; Objects; Materiality; Dementia; Multimodality; Joint activities
    2 KB (290 words) - 10:17, 17 January 2020
  • ...ts); then moves to silent first actions (requests achieved by handing over objects); and finally discusses embodied sequences fully realized in silence. The p
    1 KB (199 words) - 10:07, 17 January 2020
  • ...ethnographers and offer analytic insight into the local repair of damaged objects. In examining selected video clips, they focus on particular closures of ca
    1 KB (194 words) - 04:05, 19 January 2020
  • ...focus of this study is the detail that shapes phone records into powerful objects of knowledge among other documentary genres of the Stasi archive. The artic
    2 KB (231 words) - 03:01, 19 January 2020
  • ...and multimodal structure (the organization of space and the management of objects). From the practices of players, we question the problems and constraints e
    3 KB (508 words) - 09:56, 15 January 2020
  • ...Trust’ argument, i.e., that constitutive criteria define shared events, objects, and meanings. The argument stands in contrast to an approach to cultural a
    2 KB (261 words) - 03:40, 16 January 2020
  • ...ss. Through the use of an empirical case, the paper shows how the material objects that are deployed in a ground control tower, the different forms of informa
    2 KB (262 words) - 02:18, 12 January 2020
  • ...es in Japanese conversation: the case of turns unmarked by utterance-final objects
    588 bytes (69 words) - 12:43, 31 October 2019
  • |Title=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    1 KB (156 words) - 03:45, 19 January 2020
  • ...ge, gesture, gaze, body postures, movements, and embodied manipulations of objects – can be further expanded by considering not only embodied resources for
    1 KB (181 words) - 10:07, 17 January 2020
  • ...main activity straight after requested repair, sometimes specific receipt objects are also needed. The focus of the article is on the use of these repair rec
    1 KB (191 words) - 01:59, 19 January 2020
  • * Objects
    2 KB (302 words) - 02:46, 20 June 2019
  • ...ltimodal demonstrations of understanding of visible, imagined, and tactile objects in guided tours ...ich people show their understanding of these underresearched modalities of objects, we analyze interactions between guides and visitors in guided tours. Such
    1 KB (160 words) - 03:02, 19 January 2020
  • ...vice; membership contextualization cue; communities of practice; boundary objects; brokering ...he target membership category of Chinese journalists by brokering boundary objects such as the inference-rich information relevant to the target membership ca
    2 KB (209 words) - 07:47, 6 December 2019
  • ...ight (Goodwin 1994),” different aspects of discourse as their respective objects, in more or less explicit ways. While reflexivity pervades language at all
    3 KB (460 words) - 16:18, 14 April 2020
  • ...ch makes use of visual and other aids, devised in relation to the context. Objects of the context help us remember, measure, benchmark (Lave, Murtaugh and de ...mative forms), with deictic elements, localizations, pronouns referring to objects, uttered in isolation from other talk, not followed by any verbal response.
    23 KB (3,239 words) - 01:33, 1 October 2019
  • ...ture of collective representations as recipient designed consociate social objects. The example it examines is a Corporate risk register as the collaborative
    1 KB (152 words) - 04:21, 19 January 2020
  • ...t of converting indexical expressions to formal analytical instruments and objects. Not surprisingly, such criticism sometimes stirs strong and indignant reac
    2 KB (221 words) - 10:20, 17 January 2020
  • ...rived choreographed scenes in which real people work with ‘real world’ objects (Garfinkel). Following these analytic directions, we explore aspects of how
    2 KB (240 words) - 04:12, 19 January 2020
  • ...is mistaken to think that scientists discover about independently existing objects truths that are not artefacts of their own social and political performance
    1 KB (210 words) - 02:37, 22 November 2019
  • ...rganization of interactions, and the ability to grasp the role of material objects and environment. We outline speci c traits of video, such as the possibilit
    5 KB (313 words) - 03:22, 28 November 2019
  • ...he sequential pattern of help-seeking interactions and the crucial role of objects, such as notepads, as epistemic resources for determining the student’s p
    2 KB (201 words) - 16:22, 20 March 2020
  • ...re provided? In what ways do waiting people make use of this space and the objects to which they have access? How do they use other elements of the physical e
    2 KB (341 words) - 00:27, 3 August 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; multimodal interactions; objects in interaction; object transfers; agency ...ersation analytic research on object transfers: how participants hand over objects to one another. By analyzing video recordings of mundane (cars) and institu
    2 KB (209 words) - 17:03, 15 March 2020
  • |Title=On “Whistle” Sound Objects in English Everyday Conversation ...d on the latter type of whistle matches those found for more lexical sound objects, e.g., oh, ah, and wow. The data base for the study comprises a wide range
    1 KB (199 words) - 03:41, 6 March 2020
  • ...ng and doing. We describe four purposes and types of pausing: finding task objects, turning to action, keeping up, and fixing problems. Building on these resu
    1 KB (173 words) - 01:44, 3 July 2023
  • |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    479 bytes (56 words) - 01:23, 17 August 2023
  • |Title=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice: An Introduction |Tag(s)=EMCA; Objects in interaction; Object-centered sociality; Material objects
    449 bytes (55 words) - 00:58, 1 May 2020
  • |Title=Objects of agreement: Placing pins to progress collaborative activity in custom dre |Tag(s)=EMCA; Dressmaking; Material objects; Agreement negotiation
    515 bytes (63 words) - 01:01, 1 May 2020
  • |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    493 bytes (59 words) - 01:04, 1 May 2020
  • |Title=Informing and Demonstrating: Manipulating Objects and Patients’ Participation in Shared Decision Making |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    512 bytes (63 words) - 01:12, 1 May 2020
  • |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    484 bytes (59 words) - 01:15, 1 May 2020
  • |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    516 bytes (66 words) - 01:18, 1 May 2020
  • |Title=Dropping Off or Picking Up? Professionals’ Use of Objects as a Resource for Determining the Purpose of a Customer Encounter |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    541 bytes (71 words) - 01:20, 1 May 2020
  • |Title=Objects in Motion: ‘I’m Just Behind You’ and Other Warnings in Forklift Truck |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    517 bytes (68 words) - 01:23, 1 May 2020
  • |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    472 bytes (58 words) - 01:30, 1 May 2020
  • |Title=Designedly Incomplete Objects as Elicitation Tools in Classroom Interaction |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    489 bytes (59 words) - 01:33, 1 May 2020
  • |Title=Olfactory Objects: Recognizing, Describing and Assessing Smells during Professional Tasting S |Booktitle=Objects, Bodies and Work Practice
    487 bytes (59 words) - 01:37, 1 May 2020
  • ...ions; and the respecification of psychological phenomenon as interactional objects within discursive
    3 KB (498 words) - 04:00, 3 May 2020
  • ...h". We further argue that both the ontology and the epistemology of CA[a]s objects are changed in any next time encounter. We conclude with a cautionary specu
    2 KB (314 words) - 10:09, 7 May 2020
  • ...s research is multidisciplinary and researchers explore different research objects, theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches. We conduct design
    10 KB (1,519 words) - 03:18, 12 May 2020
  • |Title=Looking at and seeing objects: Instructed vision and collaboration in the laboratory |Tag(s)=EMCA; Laboratory studies; Visual Perception; Objects in interaction; scientific practice
    1 KB (186 words) - 03:59, 15 November 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Video-mediated communication; Objects in interaction; showing objects; occasioned showings; touched-off showings; showing prefaces; relational wo
    2 KB (293 words) - 00:21, 19 August 2020
  • ...s or animators in control of their own movements; at other times, they are objects of manipulation by others. Moreover, sometimes their movements are collabor
    2 KB (288 words) - 06:09, 31 May 2020
  • ...our engagement with the world other than through manipulating well-defined objects. The lived spatiality associated with olfaction is not reducible to the kno
    2 KB (256 words) - 09:53, 11 June 2020
  • |Title=When objects become the focus of human action and activity: Object-centred sequences in ...iguing phenomena of joint orientation to, manipulations of, and talk about objects. Considering emerging directions in the field of ethnomethodology and conve
    2 KB (285 words) - 05:36, 7 July 2020
  • ...hared endeavors and to position the clients as active subjects rather than objects of the professionals’ performance.
    2 KB (224 words) - 01:15, 3 July 2023
  • ...artwork’. Due to the value of understanding the production of artistic objects in, and as a variety of socially maintained endogenous orders, the reportag
    2 KB (218 words) - 06:13, 5 August 2020
  • ...relatively new domain of inquiry in which texts are considered as produced objects whose intelligibility is structured and organized in a way that provides in
    2 KB (245 words) - 22:27, 4 October 2020
  • ...rs of this specific setting are oriented, as by the materiality of various objects with which it must compose.
    2 KB (366 words) - 07:12, 16 October 2020
  • ...their perception of a virtual world in which the user can pick up virtual objects and use virtual tools.
    994 bytes (140 words) - 01:29, 12 December 2020
  • ...nizational texts; Texts; Textual agency; Performance appraisal interviews; Objects; Materiality; Finland; Documents
    2 KB (265 words) - 10:43, 15 January 2021
  • ...s is carried out communicatively by labelling knowledge, creating quotable objects through bodily reenactments, translating professional knowledge, and reasse
    2 KB (208 words) - 08:57, 17 February 2021
  • ...lopment. Further, the study suggests that the presence of multiple textual objects in the test setting can be an affordance or an impediment to progressivity
    3 KB (378 words) - 05:54, 16 January 2021
  • aesthetics, material culture, sensory properties and objects represented in perceptual experiences of various sense modalities, personal
    2 KB (273 words) - 06:44, 27 January 2021
  • ...nal practice. We focus on the ways in which the ``real world'' meanings of objects or events in the dream are collaboratively created. Three routes for the me
    2 KB (250 words) - 11:52, 10 April 2021
  • ...way in other activities that involve object passes (i.e., remote offers of objects and gift giving). Data are American and British English.
    1 KB (182 words) - 01:32, 4 March 2021
  • ...with verbal discourse and how children's bodies are treated as accountable objects in teacher-child interactions. The findings demonstrate that the teacher dr
    1 KB (193 words) - 03:26, 16 August 2023
  • ...ough and within social interaction? How are bodies psychologised as social objects?
    2 KB (252 words) - 06:03, 26 August 2021
  • ...the continuous modification that material assemblages built of people and objects undergo even when “only” staying immobile during a flight. Passengers d
    2 KB (219 words) - 11:19, 16 June 2021
  • |Title=Objects that matter. The hybrid and distributed agency in parent-assisted homework ...lytical geography. In this paper, we focus on the performative function of objects in an underexplored learning activity: parent-assisted homework. Adopting a
    1 KB (184 words) - 09:49, 13 May 2021
  • ...ctions in relation to, for example, encouragement, responsibility, crying, objects, empathy, joy, surprise, touch, and pain. This volume should be of interest
    1 KB (169 words) - 06:01, 26 August 2021
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; mimicry; multimodality; Video-mediated interaction; objects; gestures; embodiment; instructions; recipient design ...instruction from indexical references to known practices for dealing with objects to a more simplified discernible step-by-step description orchestrated by m
    2 KB (258 words) - 01:30, 17 August 2023
  • ...f service and sales encounters by highlighting the importance of inscribed objects to decision-making processes in social interaction.
    2 KB (222 words) - 04:27, 26 September 2023
  • ...deo; Oral history; Classroom interaction; Rewatching sequences; Structured objects; Competence; Ethnomethodology; Conversation analysis
    2 KB (384 words) - 21:30, 24 August 2021
  • ...to the Covid-19 pandemic, making it difficult for people to create social objects, and experience «reality» together in «normal» ways. The situations whe
    1 KB (180 words) - 04:53, 3 September 2021
  • |Title=Showing ‘Digital’ Objects in Web-Based Video Chats as a Collaborative Achievement |Tag(s)=EMCA; Video Calls; Objects; Video Chat
    547 bytes (68 words) - 01:19, 11 November 2021
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Ethnomethodology; Orienteering; Map; Navigation; Environmental objects
    2 KB (258 words) - 10:41, 28 February 2022
  • ...speak as or on behalf of a figure (i.e. past or fictional self, others or objects). This practice of ‘animation’ can be continued or extended by co-parti
    1 KB (185 words) - 08:11, 23 December 2021
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; activity transitions; auditory objects; multiactivity; temporality; music ...ractices for working around the organizational constraints of the auditory objects.
    1 KB (149 words) - 08:55, 21 December 2021
  • ...rbal and gestural constitution of the screen and the sheet as two separate objects that are related through instructions provided on the screen, which serves
    2 KB (247 words) - 04:44, 16 January 2022
  • |Title=Working out Douglas’s aphorism: Discarded objects, categorisation practices, and moral inquiries
    2 KB (230 words) - 08:55, 16 January 2022
  • ...ow depictive gestures, i.e., hand movements that depict actions, scenes or objects, are configured and used for accomplishing instructions. By drawing on vide
    1 KB (198 words) - 05:29, 25 February 2022
  • recognition systems to identify objects and incidents in critical domains;
    4 KB (627 words) - 09:07, 11 March 2022
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; ineffability; Intersubjectivity; sound objects; Non-lexical sounds; Sensoriality .... The implications of the findings for theoretical understandings of sound objects, language and communication, and for clinical practice, are discussed.
    2 KB (236 words) - 11:16, 14 March 2022
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Infant feeding; lip-smacks; primate interaction; Sound objects
    2 KB (206 words) - 11:24, 14 March 2022
  • ...and mind for epistemic cultures, on the elusive materiality of conceptual objects, and on researchers’ experiential ways of seizing, reviewing, and accredi
    2 KB (250 words) - 05:23, 25 March 2022
  • ...ction, the analyses will first show that jako frequently frames discursive objects that co-participants should respond to. By using jako before a pause and co
    2 KB (340 words) - 02:43, 17 April 2022
  • ...entify the strategies that therapists use to facilitate the playful use of objects for therapeutic purposes. The findings of this study support practical reco
    2 KB (223 words) - 04:28, 16 August 2023
  • ...th Parsons to Document Taken-for-Granted Practices for Assembling Cultural Objects and their Grounding in Implicit Social Contract
    2 KB (270 words) - 08:48, 25 August 2022
  • ...(STS) rejects the idea that science produces representations referring to objects or processes that exist independently of it. This radical ‘turn’ has be
    1 KB (164 words) - 01:07, 4 June 2022
  • ...pproach which denies that “science produces representations referring to objects or processes that exist independently of it.” In this ‘Comment,’ I ar
    1 KB (180 words) - 07:17, 29 August 2022
  • ...ncerning clients’ situations and how institutions operate. Because these objects may contain technical information not easily understood by clients, it is c
    1 KB (177 words) - 01:27, 10 June 2022
  • ...multimodal gestalts, i.e. the semiotic resources (verbalizations, gesture, objects etc.) used. It will be shown i) that instructions may not only be tied to s
    2 KB (268 words) - 21:47, 14 June 2022
  • ...nt who is interested in peoples use of technology, technology affordances, objects in interaction and social interaction, and who is using or want to use vide
    7 KB (1,106 words) - 20:38, 28 June 2022
  • ...ovements in space) and the physical artifacts of the material world (e.g., objects, technologies, devices, tools).
    8 KB (1,210 words) - 19:26, 29 June 2022
  • ...tt Parsons and Alfred Schütz on the following dimensions: (1) a theory of objects; (2) the logical status and uses of empirical ideal types; (3) the observer
    2 KB (236 words) - 01:48, 6 August 2023
  • |Abstract=This chapter introduces the “Missing What” of organizational objects. In order to justify the claim of ethnomethodology’s discovery of natural
    1 KB (178 words) - 13:03, 5 August 2023
  • ...ge structure, prosody, and visible embodied displays. Semiotically charged objects, such as maps, when included within local action, incorporate ways of knowi
    2 KB (315 words) - 13:03, 5 August 2023
  • |Abstract=Grasping, holding, and handling objects and implements are important features of many tasks within organisational e
    2 KB (214 words) - 04:15, 16 August 2023
  • ...blicly accessible as geologists jointly reason about the nature of various objects in collaboration with one another.
    2 KB (247 words) - 04:35, 16 August 2023
  • ...an ethnomethodological and conversation analytic approach toward touching objects in social interaction, revealing how this form of touch addresses specific
    2 KB (240 words) - 03:56, 16 August 2023
  • ...e people are momentarily “doing being” other people or ventriloquising objects.
    7 KB (1,057 words) - 12:41, 2 January 2023
  • ...fication attempts, showing them to be functionally versatile interactional objects. Their interactional flexibility notwithstanding, we find that parents typi
    2 KB (305 words) - 07:44, 19 December 2022
  • ...; Video ethnography; Visually impaired; Perception; Instructions; Haptics; Objects; Phenomenal fields; Gestalt ...the organization of visual and verbal instructions versus the touching of objects for haptic perception. Based on ethnomethodological conversation analysis o
    2 KB (304 words) - 02:51, 31 March 2023
  • ...ing a place; Gestalt; Office; Space; Visibility; Looking; Seeing; Material objects; Work; Ethnomethodology; Ethnography; In press ...by pointing out that rather than being tied to static features of material objects, the evidently visible occupational status of shared work spots is dynamica
    2 KB (217 words) - 05:30, 18 March 2023
  • ...ongruent elements in civilians’ conduct (e.g. proximity to incriminating objects), serving as a basis for inferring concealed wrongdoing, and (3) cast civil
    2 KB (207 words) - 03:58, 26 September 2023
  • ...customer interact both verbally, and by means of manipulating the material objects involved, across a range of different kinds of purchase. Providing new insi
    1 KB (206 words) - 08:11, 11 May 2023
  • ...are seen to reveal the moral and commercial nature of the manipulation of objects, and ultimately of the transaction.
    2 KB (272 words) - 08:05, 11 May 2023
  • .... [https://doi.org/10.1075/prag.17.4.03aue Why are increments such elusive objects? An afterthought]. ''Pragmatics'', ''17''(4), 647–658.
    16 KB (2,128 words) - 21:17, 22 December 2023
  • ...‘source’ for their production is the core feature of retro-sequential objects. Consequently, if the ‘outcome’ turn/action does not locate its ‘sour ...l, ‘pivotal’ or transitional devices (Küttner 2020). Retro-sequential objects need not be '''[[first-pair_part|first-pair parts]]''' of '''[[Insert expan
    8 KB (1,067 words) - 21:20, 22 December 2023
  • ...2009; Streeck & Hartge 1992), and syntactically non-integrated linguistic objects such as turn-initial particles (see Heritage 2013 for an overview).
    6 KB (802 words) - 20:58, 22 December 2023
  • Reber, E. (2012). ''Affectivity in Interaction. Sound Objects in English''. John Benjamins.
    13 KB (1,704 words) - 21:01, 22 December 2023
  • Reber, E. (2012). Affectivity in Interaction. Sound Objects in English. John Benjamins.
    7 KB (964 words) - 20:47, 22 December 2023
  • Heritage, J., & Watson, R. (1979). Formulations as Conversational Objects. In G. Psathas (Ed.), ''Everyday Language: Studies in Ethnomethodology,'' (
    6 KB (827 words) - 00:02, 23 December 2023
  • ...uctional project, and serve as real-life examples of the abstract teaching objects. The teachers calibrate grammatical and embodied resources to format recogn
    2 KB (200 words) - 08:03, 17 June 2023
  • ...lized Retina: Selection and Mathematization in the Visual Documentation of Objects in the Life sciences. ''Human Studies'', 11(2/3), 201–234
    6 KB (863 words) - 20:08, 2 January 2024
  • ...Queensland Aboriginal vernaculars and of discourse particles as linguistic objects that illustrate the inherently intersubjective nature of language.
    2 KB (237 words) - 10:41, 27 June 2023
  • ...on of these noticings is, first, to draw the co-participant's attention to objects that they treat as noteworthy, and second, to request movement towards the
    2 KB (246 words) - 04:52, 9 July 2023
  • ...ned detail* of the temporal–material productions of ordinary actions and objects, an order of detail* that, while in plain view, had escaped the notice of s
    2 KB (257 words) - 05:29, 22 July 2023
  • ...increase the visibility of interactional phenomena, reveal new analytical objects and improve analytical granularity. More specifically, these examples will
    2 KB (281 words) - 01:57, 25 August 2023
  • ...ultimodally produced, involving the body manipulating the offered material objects, and is recognized on the basis of its visible-audible features. The paper
    4 KB (530 words) - 04:20, 2 September 2023
  • ...A; Screen-centred interactions; Adult-child interactions; Gaming activity; Objects; Temporalities; Multimodality
    2 KB (212 words) - 04:21, 25 September 2023
  • ...e study of technology, such as Mead’s examination of the constitution of objects through action and Blumer’s analysis of social change during industrializ
    2 KB (217 words) - 03:35, 26 September 2023
  • Laurier, E. (2013). Noticing: Talk, gestures, movement and objects in video analysis. In R. Lee, N. Castree, R. Kitchin, V. Lawson, A. Paasi,
    14 KB (1,888 words) - 22:49, 22 December 2023
  • |Title=Artworks as Instructed Objects: An Ethnomethodological Approach to Artists' Instructions ...ylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003279235-11/artworks-instructed-objects-yaël-kreplak
    2 KB (263 words) - 10:23, 19 October 2023
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Highlighting; Digital objects; Conversation analysis; Video-mediated interaction; Video-mediated learning ...nt. The study contributes to a better understanding of screens and digital objects as collaborative and structuring resources and of how they can be meaningfu
    2 KB (211 words) - 01:08, 21 October 2023
  • Reber, E. (2012). ''Affectivity in Interaction: Sound objects in English''. John Benjamins.
    14 KB (1,924 words) - 13:18, 10 November 2023
  • ...cial activity in which the senses and the sensorial features of the tasted objects are the main focus of the participants, who do not only experience taste bu
    2 KB (295 words) - 05:34, 11 November 2023
  • ...as a fundamental way to establish interpersonal connections, and touching objects as a fundamental way to explore and connect to the material environment. Ea '''Touching objects'''
    16 KB (2,316 words) - 23:33, 2 January 2024
  • ...en visual objects, but on the action that achieves the visibility of these objects and their relations, moment-by-moment and here-and-now within social intera
    14 KB (1,957 words) - 23:38, 2 January 2024
  • ...acial expressions, body postures, movements in space, and manipulations of objects. ‘Transcription’ refers both to the action producing it (''transcribing
    14 KB (2,007 words) - 00:01, 3 January 2024
  • ...tion as a collective engagement toward things, artifacts, tools, and other objects. The first produces a sensorial conception of social interaction, the secon ...se, touch is involved both in managing social interaction and in exploring objects of the world within social interaction. Touch is a fundamental aspect of hu
    20 KB (2,699 words) - 23:44, 2 January 2024
  • ...lso uses arrows to indicate, for example, middle distance gazes, gazing at objects, gaze shifts toward an interactant, and so on)
    15 KB (2,104 words) - 20:22, 2 January 2024
  • ...are methodically left unstated by participants” (Reber 2012: 245). Sound objects comprise words, specifically primary interjections, e.g., the variants of E ...ve recurrent bodily movements (Wiggins & Keevallik 2021). Responsive sound objects constitute a type of '''[[minimal response]]''', along with, e.g., nonverba
    10 KB (1,306 words) - 22:52, 17 November 2023
  • ...ctions, i.e., recurrent pairings of form and function. In this vein, sound objects comprise a continuum of “spoken communicative signs” including nonlingu Reber, E. (2012). ''Affectivity in Interaction: Sound objects in English''. John Benjamins.
    10 KB (1,284 words) - 22:51, 17 November 2023
  • ...interaction and how various multimodal resources (e.g., talk, embodiment, objects) – or what Goodwin (2000) calls ‘contextual configuration’ – featur ...r objects emerge and are negotiated in social interaction. In other words, objects become situated accomplishments (Nevile et al. 2014b, p. 4). The following
    11 KB (1,633 words) - 22:56, 21 December 2023
  • * '''[[Objects]]'''
    14 KB (1,846 words) - 23:00, 21 December 2023
  • ...raction; Artificial intelligence; AI Reference List; Chatbots; Information objects; Ethnomethodology; Conversation analysis; Indexicality; Sequentiality; Hist ...utational practices to provide for the design of more flexible information objects.
    2 KB (288 words) - 00:19, 22 November 2023
  • ...ion, and perceptual issues concerning spatial relations between bodies and objects in space.
    1 KB (180 words) - 03:55, 8 December 2023
  • ...video data from Japan and Denmark and contributes to our understanding of objects-in-interaction in general.
    1 KB (190 words) - 03:57, 8 December 2023
  • ...immediately available in the physical space as they became characters and objects through the supported actions of the mother. At the age of 3, Rosie initiat
    2 KB (298 words) - 07:10, 14 December 2023
  • ...en I argue for the intersubjective–intercorporeal understanding of those objects as emergent learnables in classroom talk in their immediate contextual and
    2 KB (293 words) - 07:10, 22 December 2023
  • ...CA for reflection on pedagogical practices and CA for reconsideration of objects of teaching and assessment, and discusses areas of consideration for bridgi
    1 KB (193 words) - 08:06, 22 December 2023
  • ...to ethnomethodology and conversation analysis by critically examining how objects are used to teach VIPs in math classes. The research has implications for a
    2 KB (257 words) - 01:28, 15 January 2024
  • ...ims at associating words and sensations: Participants engage with material objects (samples to taste), and utter/write down words corresponding to the way the
    2 KB (268 words) - 01:36, 15 January 2024
  • ...and mathematics rather than (merely) manipulating, arranging and counting objects. The analysis thus exemplifies how, by the use of language as a resource,
    1 KB (204 words) - 14:38, 29 January 2024
  • ...dal conversation analytic research on instructions and instructed actions, objects, technologies, and touch in interaction. We show that the company represent
    2 KB (291 words) - 04:45, 29 February 2024
  • ...erspectives have contributed to a shift in focus, from texts as linguistic objects to the practices in which texts are embedded. With a starting point in ethn
    1 KB (198 words) - 00:42, 14 March 2024
  • ...through touch, share the student’s embodied stance, make use of physical objects as tools for practicing skills and orient to the student’s body as visual
    2 KB (256 words) - 13:29, 28 March 2024
  • |Title=Arguing with objects and bodies: embodied reasoning and material entanglements in science learne |Tag(s)=EMCA; In Press; science learning; gesture; objects; expert-novice interaction
    2 KB (224 words) - 11:58, 5 April 2024
  • ...ieved through the participants’ early projection of how to pass the food objects and their stepwise mutual adjustments to their conjoint action trajectory.
    2 KB (316 words) - 03:40, 8 May 2024