Difference between revisions of "Selting-etal2011"

From emcawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Margret Selting; Peter Auer; Dagmar Barth-Weingarten; Jörg Bergmann; Pia Bergmann; Karin Birkner; Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen; Arnulf Depp...")
(No difference)

Revision as of 08:09, 3 May 2017

Selting-etal2011
BibType ARTICLE
Key Selting-etal2011
Author(s) Margret Selting, Peter Auer, Dagmar Barth-Weingarten, Jörg Bergmann, Pia Bergmann, Karin Birkner, Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen, Arnulf Deppermann, Peter Gilles, Susanne Günthner, Martin Hartung, Friederike Kern, Christine Mertzlufft, Christian Meyer, Miriam Morek, Frank Oberzaucher, Jörg Peters, Uta Quasthoff, Wilfried Schütte, Anja Stukenbrock, Susanne Uhmann
Title A system for transcribing talk-in-interaction: GAT 2
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, IL, Transcription, Prosody, Conversation Analysis
Publisher
Year 2011
Language
City
Month
Journal Gesprächsforschung - Online-Zeitschrift zur verbalen Interaktion
Volume 12
Number
Pages 1-51
URL Link
DOI
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This article presents a revised version of GAT, a transcription system first devel- oped by a group of German conversation analysts and interactional linguists in 1998. GAT tries to follow as many principles and conventions as possible of the Jefferson-style transcription used in Conversation Analysis, yet proposes some conventions which are more compatible with linguistic and phonetic analyses of spoken language, especially for the representation of prosody in talk-in-interac- tion. After ten years of use by researchers in conversation and discourse analysis, the original GAT has been revised, against the background of past experience and in light of new necessities for the transcription of corpora arising from technologi- cal advances and methodological developments over recent years. The present text makes GAT accessible for the English-speaking community. It presents the GAT 2 transcription system with all its conventions and gives detailed instruc- tions on how to transcribe spoken interaction at three levels of delicacy: minimal, basic and fine. In addition, it briefly introduces some tools that may be helpful for the user: the German online tutorial GAT-TO and the transcription editing software FOLKER.

Notes

Translated and adapted for English by Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen, Dagmar Barth-Weingarten