Difference between revisions of "Stolle2023"

From emcawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "{{BibEntry |BibType=ARTICLE |Author(s)=Sarah I. Stolle; Martin Pfeiffer |Title=Stand-Alone Facial Gestures as Other-Initiations of Repair |Tag(s)=EMCA; Facial gestures; Facial...")
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 10:45, 12 February 2024

Stolle2023
BibType ARTICLE
Key Stolle2023
Author(s) Sarah I. Stolle, Martin Pfeiffer
Title Stand-Alone Facial Gestures as Other-Initiations of Repair
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Facial gestures, Facial expressions, Other-initiation of repair, Preference for progressivity, Multimodality, Multimodal interaction
Publisher
Year 2024
Language English
City
Month
Journal Social Interaction: Video-Based Studies of Human Sociality
Volume 6
Number 3
Pages
URL Link
DOI 10.7146/si.v6i3.142896
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

Based on video recordings of everyday German face-to-face interaction, we focus on how eyebrow furrows, eyebrow raising, eye widening, and freeze-look are used without co-occurring verbal repair initiations to indicate a problem in another participant’s turn. Unlike verbal initiations, facial other-initiations of repair only minimally disrupt the progressivity of interaction, since they can be used simultaneously with the emerging trouble-source turn and do not initiate a side sequence. Through their early positioning and their sequentially unobstructive character, facial other-initiations of repair systematically provide an occasion for the speaker of the repairable turn to carry out self-repair at the next transition-relevance place. Our findings point to the necessity of reconsidering traditional conceptualizations of the repair system in order to take bodily repair-initiating practices into account.

Notes