International audienceNot all pieces of information mentioned during an interaction are equally accessible in speakers’ conversational memory. The current study sought to test whether 2 basic features of dialogue management (reference acceptance and reuse) affect reference recognition. Dyads of speakers were asked to discuss a route for an imaginary person, thus referring to the landmarks to be encountered. The results revealed that the participants’ conversational memory for the references produced during the interaction depended on whether these had been reused during the interaction and by whom, along with landmark visibility during the interaction. These findings have implications for partner adaptation in dialogue, which depends in par...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
Definite references signal the belief that listeners can uniquely identify referents. Our previous r...
International audienceIn dialogue, speakers jointly decide how to refer to the referents under discu...
International audienceNot all pieces of information mentioned during an interaction are equally acce...
International audienceAs speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they c...
International audienceWords that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered...
Conversational memory is subject to a number of biases. For instance, references which were reused d...
During dialog, references are presented, accepted, and potentially reused (depending on their access...
International audienceIn human–human dialogue, the way in which a piece of information is added to t...
International audienceTwo experiments investigated how both shared and privileged knowledge affect r...
It is well established that conversational partners jointly establish brief labels for repeatedly me...
When speakers in dialogue are faced with the need to repeatedly refer to the same items, they usual...
Dialogue participants often refer to entities or situations repeatedly within a conversation, which ...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Speakers in conversations must often keep track of which referents in the world they share with whic...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
Definite references signal the belief that listeners can uniquely identify referents. Our previous r...
International audienceIn dialogue, speakers jointly decide how to refer to the referents under discu...
International audienceNot all pieces of information mentioned during an interaction are equally acce...
International audienceAs speakers interact, they add references to their common ground, which they c...
International audienceWords that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered...
Conversational memory is subject to a number of biases. For instance, references which were reused d...
During dialog, references are presented, accepted, and potentially reused (depending on their access...
International audienceIn human–human dialogue, the way in which a piece of information is added to t...
International audienceTwo experiments investigated how both shared and privileged knowledge affect r...
It is well established that conversational partners jointly establish brief labels for repeatedly me...
When speakers in dialogue are faced with the need to repeatedly refer to the same items, they usual...
Dialogue participants often refer to entities or situations repeatedly within a conversation, which ...
Human speakers generally find it easy to refer to entities in such a way that their hearers can dete...
Speakers in conversations must often keep track of which referents in the world they share with whic...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Department of ...
Definite references signal the belief that listeners can uniquely identify referents. Our previous r...
International audienceIn dialogue, speakers jointly decide how to refer to the referents under discu...