Tsuchiya2022

From emcawiki
Revision as of 23:01, 1 November 2022 by JakubMlynar (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Keiko Tsuchiya; Frank Coffey; Kyota Nakamura; Andrew Mackenzie; Sarah Atkins; Małgorzata Chałupnik; Alison Whitfield; Takuma Sakai; St...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Tsuchiya2022
BibType ARTICLE
Key Tsuchiya2022
Author(s) Keiko Tsuchiya, Frank Coffey, Kyota Nakamura, Andrew Mackenzie, Sarah Atkins, Małgorzata Chałupnik, Alison Whitfield, Takuma Sakai, Stephen Timmons, Takeru Abe, Takeshi Saitoh, Akira Taneichi, Mike Vernon, David Crundall, Miharu Fuyuno
Title Action request episodes in trauma team interactions in Japan and the UK - A multimodal analysis of joint actions in medical simulation
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Multimodality, Multimodal analysis, Emergency care simulation, Common ground, Request, Intersubjectivity, Eye-tracking
Publisher
Year 2022
Language English
City
Month
Journal Journal of Pragmatics
Volume
Number 194
Pages 101-118
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.pragma.2022.04.009
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

Grounding is a fundamental human practice for cooperation and collaboration in a joint activity, when more than two people interact. Emergency care is one such interactive situation, and whether a trauma team can efficiently establish and increment their common ground at an appropriate timing during the complex and fluid activity of emergency medical treatment is key to maximise collective competence to best perform as a trauma team. This article investigates recurrent patterns in the grounding process between the trauma team leader and the members, comparing the practices between Japan and the UK, using an eye-tracking device. The embodied practice of grounding was multimodally described, applying both quantitative multimodal corpus analytic and qualitative interactional linguistic approaches. The analysis has shown that five grounding episodes reoccurred, most of which were more ego-centric and one of them ba-centric interactions, drawing on intersubjectivity and the theory of ba in Western and Eastern philosophy respectively.

Notes