Difference between revisions of "Szymanski-etal2006"

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(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Margaret H. Szymanski; Erik Vinkhuyzen; Paul M. Aoki; Allison Woodruff; |Title=Organizing a remote state of incipient talk: Push-to-talk...")
 
 
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|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|Author(s)=Margaret H. Szymanski; Erik Vinkhuyzen; Paul M. Aoki; Allison Woodruff;
 
|Author(s)=Margaret H. Szymanski; Erik Vinkhuyzen; Paul M. Aoki; Allison Woodruff;
|Title=Organizing a remote state of incipient talk: Push-to-talk mobile radio interaction
+
|Title=Organizing a remote state of incipient talk: push-to-talk mobile radio interaction
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Continuing state of incipient talk; conversation analysis; reengaging and disengaging talk; mobile radio communication
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Continuing state of incipient talk; conversation analysis; reengaging and disengaging talk; mobile radio communication
 
|Key=Szymanski-etal2006
 
|Key=Szymanski-etal2006
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|Journal=Language in Society
 
|Journal=Language in Society
 
|Volume=35
 
|Volume=35
 +
|Number=3
 
|Pages=393–418
 
|Pages=393–418
|DOI=10.10170S0047404506060180
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|URL=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/language-in-society/article/organizing-a-remote-state-of-incipient-talk-pushtotalk-mobile-radio-interaction/E5951058D2AC531C103088011C35A913
|Abstract=This study investigates the organization of conversational interaction via
+
|DOI=10.1017/S0047404506060180
push-to-talk mobile radios. Operating like long-range walkie-talkies, the
+
|Abstract=This study investigates the organization of conversational interaction via push-to-talk mobile radios. Operating like long-range walkie-talkies, the mobile radios mediate a remote state of incipient talk; at the push of a button, speakers can initiate, engage, disengage, and reengage turn-by-turn talk. Eight friends used the mobile radios for one week; 50 of their conversational exchanges were analyzed using conversation analytic methods. The findings describe the contour of their conversational exchanges: how turn-by-turn talk is engaged, sustained, and disengaged. Similar to a continuing state of incipient talk in copresence, opening and closing sequences are rare. Instead, speakers engage turn-by-turn talk by immediately launching the purpose of the call. Speakers disengage turn-by-turn talk by orienting to the relevance of a lapse at sequence completion. Once engaged, the mobile radio system imposes silence between speakers' turns at talk, giving them a resource for managing a remote conversation amid ongoing copresent activities.
mobile radios mediate a remote state of incipient talk; at the push of a but-
 
ton, speakers can initiate, engage, disengage, and reengage turn-by-turn talk.
 
Eight friends used the mobile radios for one week; 50 of their conversa-
 
tional exchanges were analyzed using conversation analytic methods. The
 
findings describe the contour of their conversational exchanges: how turn-
 
by-turn talk is engaged, sustained, and disengaged. Similar to a continuing
 
state of incipient talk in copresence, opening and closing sequences are rare.
 
Instead, speakers engage turn-by-turn talk by immediately launching the
 
purpose of the call. Speakers disengage turn-by-turn talk by orienting to the
 
relevance of a lapse at sequence completion. Once engaged, the mobile ra-
 
dio system imposes silence between speakers’ turns at talk, giving them a
 
resource for managing a remote conversation amid ongoing copresent ac-
 
tivities.
 
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 08:53, 13 November 2019

Szymanski-etal2006
BibType ARTICLE
Key Szymanski-etal2006
Author(s) Margaret H. Szymanski, Erik Vinkhuyzen, Paul M. Aoki, Allison Woodruff
Title Organizing a remote state of incipient talk: push-to-talk mobile radio interaction
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Continuing state of incipient talk, conversation analysis, reengaging and disengaging talk, mobile radio communication
Publisher
Year 2006
Language English
City
Month
Journal Language in Society
Volume 35
Number 3
Pages 393–418
URL Link
DOI 10.1017/S0047404506060180
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This study investigates the organization of conversational interaction via push-to-talk mobile radios. Operating like long-range walkie-talkies, the mobile radios mediate a remote state of incipient talk; at the push of a button, speakers can initiate, engage, disengage, and reengage turn-by-turn talk. Eight friends used the mobile radios for one week; 50 of their conversational exchanges were analyzed using conversation analytic methods. The findings describe the contour of their conversational exchanges: how turn-by-turn talk is engaged, sustained, and disengaged. Similar to a continuing state of incipient talk in copresence, opening and closing sequences are rare. Instead, speakers engage turn-by-turn talk by immediately launching the purpose of the call. Speakers disengage turn-by-turn talk by orienting to the relevance of a lapse at sequence completion. Once engaged, the mobile radio system imposes silence between speakers' turns at talk, giving them a resource for managing a remote conversation amid ongoing copresent activities.

Notes