Analysing cross-speaker convergence in face-to-face dialogue through the lens of automatically detected shared linguistic constructions
Publication year
2024In
Samuelson, L.K.; Frank, S.L.; Toneva, M. (ed.), Proceedings of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, pp. 1717-1723Related links
Annotation
CogSci 2024: 46th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 24-27 July, 2024)
Publication type
Article in monograph or in proceedings
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Editor(s)
Samuelson, L.K.
Frank, S.L.
Toneva, M.
Mackey, A.
Hazeltine, E.
Organization
SW OZ DCC PL
SW OZ DCC CO
PI Group Intention & Action
Languages used
English (eng)
Book title
Samuelson, L.K.; Frank, S.L.; Toneva, M. (ed.), Proceedings of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society
Page start
p. 1717
Page end
p. 1723
Subject
111 000 Intention & Action; Action, intention, and motor control; PsycholinguisticsAbstract
Conversation requires a substantial amount of coordination between dialogue participants, from managing turn taking to negotiating mutual understanding. Part of this coordination effort surfaces as the reuse of linguistic behaviour across speakers, a process often referred to as alignment. While the presence of linguistic alignment is well documented in the literature, several questions remain open, including the extent to which patterns of reuse across speakers have an impact on the emergence of labelling conventions for novel referents. In this study, we put forward a methodology for automatically detecting shared lemmatised constructions - expressions with a common lexical core used by both speakers within a dialogue - and apply it to a referential communication corpus where participants aim to identify novel objects for which no established labels exist. Our analyses uncover the usage patterns of shared constructions in interaction and reveal that features such as their frequency and the amount of different constructions used for a referent are associated with the degree of object labelling convergence the participants exhibit after social interaction. More generally, the present study shows that automatically detected shared constructions offer a useful level of analysis to investigate the dynamics of reference negotiation in dialogue.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [246515]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [4040]
- Electronic publications [134102]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30494]
- Open Access publications [107633]
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