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[10] | Anna Vatanen, (2020), "The interaction order of silent moments in everyday life: Lapses as joint embodied achievements", In Silence and silencing in psychoanalysis: Cultural, clinical, and research perspectives (Michael B. Buchholz, Aleksandar Dimitrijević, eds.), London, Routledge, pp. 307–332.
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[9] | Elliott M. Hoey, (2020), "When Conversation Lapses: The Public Accountability of Silent Copresence", Oxford University Press.
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[8] | Michael Haugh, Simon Musgrave, (2019), "Conversational lapses and laughter: Towards a combinatorial approach to building collections in conversation analysis", Journal of Pragmatics, vol. 143, pp. 279–291.
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[7] | Leelo Keevallik, (2018), "The temporal organization of conversation while mucking out a sheep stable", In Time in Embodied Interaction: Synchronicity and Sequentiality of Multimodal Resources (Arnulf Deppermann, Jürgen Streeck, eds.), Amsterdam, John Benjamins, pp. 97–122.
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[6] | Elliott M. Hoey, (2018), "How speakers continue with talk after a lapse in conversation", Research on Language and Social Interaction, vol. 51, no. 3, pp. 329–346.
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[5] | Elliott M. Hoey, (2017), "Lapse organization in interaction", PhD thesis, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics.
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[4] | Elliott M. Hoey, (2017), "Sequence recompletion: A practice for managing lapses in conversation", Journal of Pragmatics, vol. 109, pp. 47-63.
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[3] | Israel Berger, Rowena Viney, John P. Rae, (2016), "Do continuing states of incipient talk exist?", Journal of Pragmatics, vol. 91, pp. 29–44.
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[2] | Elliott M. Hoey, (2015), "Lapses: how people arrive at, and deal with, discontinuities in talk", Research on Language and Social Interaction, vol. 48, no. 4, pp. 430–453.
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[1] | Israel Berger, (2011), "Support and evidence for considering local contingencies in studying and transcribing silence in conversation", Pragmatics, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 411–430.
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