Litcius/Paper detail

Quantifying the interplay of conversational devices in building mutual understanding.

Christina Dideriksen, Morten H. Christiansen, Kristian Tylén, Mark Dingemanse, Riccardo Fusaroli

2022Journal of Experimental Psychology General60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Contrasting affiliative and task-oriented conversations within participants, we find that conversational devices adaptively adjust to the increased need for precision in the latter: We show that low-precision devices such as backchannels are more frequent in affiliative conversations, whereas more costly but higher-precision mechanisms, such as specific repairs, are more frequent in task-oriented conversations. Further, task-oriented conversations involve higher complementarity of contributions in terms of the content and perspective: lower semantic entrainment and less frequent (but richer) lexical and syntactic entrainment. Finally, we show that the observed variations in the use of conversational devices are potentially adaptive: pairs of interlocutors that show stronger linguistic complementarity perform better across the two tasks. By combining motivated comparisons of several conversational contexts and theoretically informed computational analyses of empirical data the present work lays the foundations for a comprehensive conceptual framework for understanding the use of conversational devices in dialogue. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyCognitive psychologyCognitive scienceCommunicationLinguisticsPhilosophySpeech and dialogue systemsLanguage, Metaphor, and CognitionLanguage, Discourse, Communication Strategies