Difference between revisions of "Walker2012"

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{{BibEntry
 
{{BibEntry
|Key=walk2012
 
|Key=walk2012
 
|Title=Coordination and Interpretation of Vocal and Visible Resources: `Trail-off' Conjunctions
 
|Author(s)=Gareth Walker;
 
|Tag(s)=Interactional Linguistics
 
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 
|BibType=ARTICLE
 +
|Author(s)=Gareth Walker;
 +
|Title=Coordination and interpretation of vocal and visible resources: “trail-off” conjunctions
 +
|Tag(s)=Interactional Linguistics; EMCA; trail-off; conversation; gaze; gesture; phonetics; turn-taking;
 +
|Key=Walker2012
 
|Year=2012
 
|Year=2012
 
|Journal=Language and Speech
 
|Journal=Language and Speech
 
|Volume=55
 
|Volume=55
 
|Number=1
 
|Number=1
|Pages=141-163
+
|Pages=141–163
 +
|URL=https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0023830911428858
 +
|DOI=10.1177/0023830911428858
 +
|Abstract=The empirical focus of this paper is a conversational turn-taking phenomenon in which conjunctions produced immediately after a point of possible syntactic and pragmatic completion are treated by co-participants as points of possible completion and transition relevance. The data for this study are audio-video recordings of 5 unscripted face-to-face interactions involving native speakers of US English, yielding 28 'trail-off' conjunctions. Detailed sequential analysis of talk is combined with analysis of visible features (including gaze, posture, gesture and involvement with material objects) and technical phonetic analysis. A range of phonetic and visible features are shown to regularly co-occur in the production of 'trail-off' conjunctions. These features distinguish them from other conjunctions followed by the cessation of talk.
 
}}
 
}}

Latest revision as of 04:52, 30 November 2019

Walker2012
BibType ARTICLE
Key Walker2012
Author(s) Gareth Walker
Title Coordination and interpretation of vocal and visible resources: “trail-off” conjunctions
Editor(s)
Tag(s) Interactional Linguistics, EMCA, trail-off, conversation, gaze, gesture, phonetics, turn-taking
Publisher
Year 2012
Language
City
Month
Journal Language and Speech
Volume 55
Number 1
Pages 141–163
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/0023830911428858
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The empirical focus of this paper is a conversational turn-taking phenomenon in which conjunctions produced immediately after a point of possible syntactic and pragmatic completion are treated by co-participants as points of possible completion and transition relevance. The data for this study are audio-video recordings of 5 unscripted face-to-face interactions involving native speakers of US English, yielding 28 'trail-off' conjunctions. Detailed sequential analysis of talk is combined with analysis of visible features (including gaze, posture, gesture and involvement with material objects) and technical phonetic analysis. A range of phonetic and visible features are shown to regularly co-occur in the production of 'trail-off' conjunctions. These features distinguish them from other conjunctions followed by the cessation of talk.

Notes