Common Ground in Electronically Mediated Conversation
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Common ground and cultural prominence: how conversation reinforces culture.
Why do well-known ideas, practices, and people maintain their cultural prominence in the presence of equally good or better alternatives? This article suggests that a social-psychological process whereby people seek to establish common ground with their conversation partners causes familiar elements of culture to increase in prominence, independently of performance or quality. Two studies teste...
متن کاملRelevance in computer-mediated conversation
1. Introduction Relevance or relatedness across speaker utterances is a basic normative ideal of conversation, upon which inter-subjective coherence is said to depend (Grice 1975; Sperber and Wilson 1986). Floutings of relevance are the exceptions that prove the rule, in that they typically signal an underlying coherence that can be derived through cognitive inferencing. Most research on releva...
متن کاملParticipatory status in electronically mediated collaborative work
Overhearing has been observed to be an important conversational resource in a number of cooperative work contexts. Participatory status describes a particular kind of overhearing where two or more primary participants are actively involved in some cooperative task with one or more peripheral participants who are not actively involved, but nevertheless have a legitimate reason for listening in. ...
متن کاملThe art of conversation is coordination: common ground and the coupling of eye movements during dialogue.
When two people discuss something they can see in front of them, what is the relationship between their eye movements? We recorded the gaze of pairs of subjects engaged in live, spontaneous dialogue. Cross-recurrence analysis revealed a coupling between the eye movements of the two conversants. In the first study, we found their eye movements were coupled across several seconds. In the second, ...
متن کاملCommon ground
The fundamental message of Garrett Hardin's essay 'The Tragedy of the Commons' [1], recently re-visited in these pages by Peter Kareiva [2], is unassailable. If resources are available to all without restraint, they will be over-exploited. That is a simple tenet of population biology, encapsulated in theories of competitive interaction between individuals, and is an explanation for the well-kno...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Synthesis Lectures on Human-Centered Informatics
سال: 2008
ISSN: 1946-7680,1946-7699
DOI: 10.2200/s00154ed1v01y200810hci001