The analysis of language use in real-world contexts poses particular methodological challenges. We codify responses to these challenges as a series of methodological imperatives. To demonstrate the relevance of these imperatives to clinical investigation, we present analyses of single episodes of interaction where one participant has a speech and/or language impairment: atypical prosody, echolalia and dysarthria. We demonstrate there is considerable heuristic and analytic value in taking this approach to analysing the organization of interaction involving individuals with a speech and/or language impairment
With this special issue, we would like to present current Conversation-Analytic and Interactional-Li...
an essential necessity for the success of humans. Humans are born with the special ability to acquir...
Contributing to conversation analytic research into ‘atypical interaction’ (i.e. naturally-occurring...
We describe and exemplify a methodology for providing an integrated account of the communicative fun...
This paper illustrates the methodological contributions of Conversation Analysis-Interactional Lingu...
There is a need to get to grips with the phonetic design of talk in its totality and without a separ...
What do people do with sniffs, lip-smacks, grunts, moans, sighs, whistles and clicks, where these ar...
This sub-project is concerned with analysis and cross-linguistic comparison of the mechanisms of sig...
In this paper I make two main points: (1) we need a better understanding of context, (2) there may b...
In this article I review conversation analytic work on “atypical interaction”—social interactions wh...
Complaints might be thought a priori to be a good place to find paralinguistic features in a natural...
In this response to Peter Auer's commentary, I revisit the question of phonetic form and interaction...
Linguists, and other analysts of discourse, regularly make appeal to affectual states in determining...
An auspicious but unexplored environment for studying phonetic variation in naturalistic interaction...
This chapter describes ways to approach the phonetic analysis of talk-in-interaction. It starts off ...
With this special issue, we would like to present current Conversation-Analytic and Interactional-Li...
an essential necessity for the success of humans. Humans are born with the special ability to acquir...
Contributing to conversation analytic research into ‘atypical interaction’ (i.e. naturally-occurring...
We describe and exemplify a methodology for providing an integrated account of the communicative fun...
This paper illustrates the methodological contributions of Conversation Analysis-Interactional Lingu...
There is a need to get to grips with the phonetic design of talk in its totality and without a separ...
What do people do with sniffs, lip-smacks, grunts, moans, sighs, whistles and clicks, where these ar...
This sub-project is concerned with analysis and cross-linguistic comparison of the mechanisms of sig...
In this paper I make two main points: (1) we need a better understanding of context, (2) there may b...
In this article I review conversation analytic work on “atypical interaction”—social interactions wh...
Complaints might be thought a priori to be a good place to find paralinguistic features in a natural...
In this response to Peter Auer's commentary, I revisit the question of phonetic form and interaction...
Linguists, and other analysts of discourse, regularly make appeal to affectual states in determining...
An auspicious but unexplored environment for studying phonetic variation in naturalistic interaction...
This chapter describes ways to approach the phonetic analysis of talk-in-interaction. It starts off ...
With this special issue, we would like to present current Conversation-Analytic and Interactional-Li...
an essential necessity for the success of humans. Humans are born with the special ability to acquir...
Contributing to conversation analytic research into ‘atypical interaction’ (i.e. naturally-occurring...