Subject:
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Language & Communication Multimodal language and communication Language in Interaction |
Organization:
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Internationale Bedrijfscommunicatie |
Subsidient :
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NWO(Grant code :info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/NWO/Gravitation/024.001.006)
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Book title:
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Proceedings of CogSci 2019 |
Abstract:
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Do interlocutors adjust their conversational strategies to the specific contextual demands of a given situation? Prior studies have yielded conflicting results, making it unclear how strategies vary with demands. We combine insights from qualitative and quantitative approaches in a within-participant experimental design involving two different contexts: spontaneously occurring conversations (SOC) and task-oriented conversations (TOC). We systematically assess backchanneling, other-repair and linguistic alignment. We find that SOC exhibit a higher number of backchannels, a reduced and more generic repair format and higher rates of lexical and syntactic alignment. TOC are characterized by a high number of specific repairs and a lower rate of lexical and syntactic alignment. However, when alignment occurs, more linguistic forms are aligned. The findings show that conversational strategies adapt to specific contextual demands.
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