When interlocutors repeatedly describe referents to each other, they rapidly converge on referring expressions which become increasingly systematized and abstract as the interaction progresses. Previous experimental research suggests that interactive repair mechanisms in dialogue underpin convergence. However, this research has so far only focused on the role of other-initiated repair and has not examined whether self-initiated repair might also play a role. To investigate this question, we report the results from a computer-mediated maze task experiment. In this task, participants communicate with each other via an experimental chat tool, which selectively transforms participants’ private turn-revisions into public self-repairs that are ma...
Prior conversation analytic research has demonstrated that when, following a sequence-initiating act...
PhDSelf-repairs, where speakers repeat themselves, reformulate or restart what they are saying, are ...
There are dedicated reference terms—in English—for self- and recipient reference (I and its grammati...
When interlocutors repeatedly describe referents to each other, they rapidly converge on referring e...
We report a dialogue task which investigates how the mechanisms of miscommunication contribute towar...
People give feedback in conversation: both positive signals of understanding, such as nods, and nega...
Words that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered better than words tha...
People give feedback in conversation: both positive signals of understanding, such as nods, and nega...
A crucial aspect of everyday conversational interactions is our ability to establish and maintain co...
Miscommunication phenomena such as repair in dialogue are important indicators of the quality of com...
Recent research indicates that interpersonal communication is noisy, and that people exhibit conside...
Prior conversation analytic research has demonstrated that when, following a sequence-initiating act...
This dissertation presents microanalyses of same-turn self-initiated self-repair practices employed ...
Accessibility theory associates more complex referring expressions with less accessible referents. F...
During dialog, references are presented, accepted, and potentially reused (depending on their access...
Prior conversation analytic research has demonstrated that when, following a sequence-initiating act...
PhDSelf-repairs, where speakers repeat themselves, reformulate or restart what they are saying, are ...
There are dedicated reference terms—in English—for self- and recipient reference (I and its grammati...
When interlocutors repeatedly describe referents to each other, they rapidly converge on referring e...
We report a dialogue task which investigates how the mechanisms of miscommunication contribute towar...
People give feedback in conversation: both positive signals of understanding, such as nods, and nega...
Words that are produced aloud—and especially self-produced ones—are remembered better than words tha...
People give feedback in conversation: both positive signals of understanding, such as nods, and nega...
A crucial aspect of everyday conversational interactions is our ability to establish and maintain co...
Miscommunication phenomena such as repair in dialogue are important indicators of the quality of com...
Recent research indicates that interpersonal communication is noisy, and that people exhibit conside...
Prior conversation analytic research has demonstrated that when, following a sequence-initiating act...
This dissertation presents microanalyses of same-turn self-initiated self-repair practices employed ...
Accessibility theory associates more complex referring expressions with less accessible referents. F...
During dialog, references are presented, accepted, and potentially reused (depending on their access...
Prior conversation analytic research has demonstrated that when, following a sequence-initiating act...
PhDSelf-repairs, where speakers repeat themselves, reformulate or restart what they are saying, are ...
There are dedicated reference terms—in English—for self- and recipient reference (I and its grammati...