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Virtual Hand with Ambiguous Movement between the Self and Other Origin: Sense of Ownership and 'Other-Produced' Agency
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Published on: October 28, 2020

Bodily-visual practices and turn continuation.

Cecilia E Ford1, Sandra A Thompson, Veronika Drake

  • 1University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Discourse Processes
|March 26, 2013
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study examines how non-verbal, bodily-visual actions extend conversational turns, complementing verbal cues. These embodied movements facilitate social actions like stance display and subsidiary interactions during talk.

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Area of Science:

  • Linguistics
  • Sociology
  • Communication Studies

Background:

  • Conversation analysis shows talk often continues past potential turn completion.
  • Bodily-visual behaviors are observed to perform turn extension work.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze the distinct properties of embodied movements in turn extension.
  • To understand how bodily-visual behaviors support specific social actions like stance display and by-play.
  • To contribute to the understanding of multimodal interaction in conversation.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of bodily-visual behaviors in conversational turn-taking.
  • Comparison of embodied movements with verbal turn extensions.
  • Examination of social actions facilitated by non-verbal cues.

Main Results:

  • Embodied movements share features with verbal extensions but possess unique properties.
  • Bodily-visual behaviors are adept at stance display and managing subsidiary interactions.
  • These non-verbal actions are coordinated with verbal exchanges.

Conclusions:

  • Interaction involves coordinated management of multiple semiotic systems (verbal and non-verbal).
  • Bodily-visual turn extensions are integral to social action in conversation.
  • Research should consider the independent organization of each semiotic modality.