Search results for " experimental"

showing 10 items of 3530 documents

Using discourse markers to negotiate epistemic stance: A view from situated language use

2021

Abstract In this paper, I analyse the usage of a discourse marker =mari, belonging to the epistemic paradigm attested in Upper Napo Kichwa (Quechuan, Ecuador). I show that the use of =mari indicates that the information is known well to the speaker, but also to some extent familiar to the addressee. In situated language use, the marker contributes to creating a knowing epistemic stance of the speaker. The analysis presented here is based on a 13-h documentary corpus of interactive Upper Napo Kichwa discourse, recorded on audio and video. For the purpose of the paper, the relevant utterances are analysed in their broad interactional context, including not only the surrounding text, but also …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageConversation analysismedia_common.quotation_subjectEvidentialityContext (language use)Semantics050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsArtificial IntelligenceCliticSituated0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociologymedia_commonGeneral Language Studies and LinguisticsEpistemic authorityJämförande språkvetenskap och allmän lingvistikShared knowledgeQuechua05 social sciencesPragmaticsEpistemologyNegotiationKichwaDiscourse markerJournal of Pragmatics
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2020

Abstract In classroom settings, laughter and smiles are resources for action that are available to both teachers and students. Recent interactional studies have documented how students use these resources to deal with trouble of various kind, but less is known about the sequential and activity contexts of teachers’ laughter-relevant practices, as well as their pedagogical functions. We use multimodal conversation analysis (CA) to investigate the interactional unfolding and pedagogical orientations of teacher smiles during instructional IRE (initiation-response-evaluation) sequences in a corpus of 37 bilingual lessons collected in schools in Finland and Spain. In analysing the focal smiles, …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageFacial expression4. Educationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLaughterConversation analysisResource (project management)Action (philosophy)Artificial IntelligenceEmbodied cognitionSituatedMathematics education0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologymedia_commonJournal of Pragmatics
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Verbalization of nominalizations: A typological commentary on the article by Nikki van de Pol

2019

Abstract The present article provides a typological commentary on the article by Nikki van de Pol (2019) on the history of the English gerund. It is shown that in spite of certain idiosyncratic aspects, the history of the verbal gerund illustrates a well-known grammaticalization path of verbalization, whereby deverbal nouns are first grammaticalized into nonfinite forms (participles, infinitives, converbs), and may later be integrated into the verbal paradigm. It is further suggested that the mixed behavior attested for the verbal gerund, which deviates both from the nominal and from the clausal prototype, may be universally supported by constructional polysemy and blending with constructio…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageHistoryGerund05 social sciencesGrammaticalization050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsNominalizationLinguisticsNounSpite0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPolysemyCline (hydrology)Language Sciences
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Play it by ear? An ERP study of Chinese polysemous verb yǒu

2021

Abstract Mandarin Chinese yŏu is a polysemous verb. It can be interpreted as meaning either ‘have’ or ‘there be/exist’ in sentences of the form ‘NP1 yŏu NP2’, which can correspondingly be analyzed as either a Have-Possessive construction (‘NP1 has NP2’) or an existential/locative construction (‘(At/in) NP1 there is NP2’), or both. This study used event-related brain potentials to investigate whether and how the interpretation of yŏu in a given ‘NP1 yŏu NP2’ construction is determined by the semantics of the nouns involved and their relationship. Twenty-seven participants read sentences of this construction. The results showed that there were different patterns of brain activity that can be …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageInterpretation (logic)05 social sciencesVerbLocative caseMandarin ChinesePossessive050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsSentence processinglanguage.human_languageLinguisticsNounlanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComplementary distributionPsychologyLingua
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Prosodic modulation as a mark to express pragmatic values: The case of mitigation in Spanish

2021

Abstract One of the functions of prosody in discourse is to convey pragmatic values that add up to the core semantic meaning of spoken units or segments. Regarding mitigation, Caffi (1999: 890) specifically discusses “the very important prosodic and kinesic means of mitigation, such as changes in pitch prominence, rhythm, speech rate, as well as eye-contact, gaze, gaze aversion, smile, particular postures, etc.” In this paper, I focus on some prosodic factors such as pitch, intensity, duration and speech rate that can be used in European Spanish, in combination with pragmatic meanings. The first aim is to establish a theoretical deliberation on prosody as a clear marker to convey pragmatic …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageInterpretation (philosophy)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesFace (sociological concept)DeliberationGaze050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsFocus (linguistics)Expression (architecture)Artificial Intelligence0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesProsodyPsychologyMeaning (linguistics)media_commonJournal of Pragmatics
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Recognising mitigation: Three tests for its identification

2020

Abstract Linguistic mitigation is a pragmatic phenomenon that has been profusely treated in the literature, and yet there are few studies dedicated exclusively to offering methodological criteria for its recognition and analysis (but see Albelda, 2010 and Albelda et al., 2014). Consequently, the researcher must infer the methods for its recognition through problems arising during the analysis or through the examples and reflections offered by the authors who have addressed the issue. The purpose of this article is twofold. Firstly, to present some of the main keys for the recognition of mitigation presented by the bibliography, such as the catalogues of mitigation devices, the context, the …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageLingüísticaanalysisComputer scienceManagement science05 social sciencesFace (sociological concept)methodologyContext (language use)050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsCommutation testTest (assessment)Conjunction (grammar)mitigationIdentification (information)Artificial IntelligenceOrder (exchange)Phenomenontests0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
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The look of writing in reading. Graphetic empathy in making and perceiving graphic traces

2021

This article presents preliminary considerations and results from a research project designed to investigate the relation between (i) gestures, (ii) graphic traces and (iii) perceptions. More specifically, the project aims to test the hypothesis that graphic traces, including handwriting, can set up graphetic empathy between writers and readers of traces across long temporal and spatial distances. Insofar as a graphic trace is lawfully related to the gesture by which it came into being, the trace itself will hold information about the gesture, which may resonate with the sensorimotor system of a perceiver as if they themselves performed the gesture. If this is in fact so, it will have impor…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageNeurophenomenologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEmpathyProsody050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and Linguistics[SCCO]Cognitive sciencePhonetic empathyHandwritingPerceptionReading (process)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSet (psychology)ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonCognitive scienceOperationalization05 social sciencesElicitation interviewAffordanceTrace (semiology)PsychologyGraphetic empathyTraceGesture
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Incivility in online news and Twitter: effects on attitudes toward scientific topics when reading in a second language

2021

Due to the participatory nature of Web 2.0, polite communication on social media and news sites can stand side by side with uncivil comments. Research on online incivility has been conducted with users reading in their mother tongues (L1), while the potential effects of incivility in a second language (L2) have been largely under- explored. This paper analyzes the effects of uncivil comments written in an L2 on attitudes around emerging technologies. Accordingly, study 1 replicates and extends a previous experiment on the effects of incivility to online news on risk perceptions of nanotechnology (Anderson et al., 2014), by adding an ‘L2 condition’ (uncivil comments written in an L2). Then, …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguagePolitenessEmerging technologiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectsocial media05 social sciencesMedia studiesonline deliberationCitizen journalismscience communication050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsIncivilityincivilityCivilityemotional languagePerceptionReading (process)second language reading0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSocial mediaPsychologymedia_common
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How to do things with signs. The formulation of directives on signs in public spaces

2021

Abstract This paper analyzes signs and written messages aimed at regulating people's behavior in public spaces. Based on a collection of more than 700 verbal and pictographic signs, the paper focuses on how the formulation of the directives reflect and construct the authors' deontic authority, how they account for the social legitimacy of the directive and how they seek to evoke the addressee's goodwill and cooperativeness. The analysis shows that the author's entitlement to perform the directive may be grounded in references to institutional authority, or that it may be manifested in the linguistic or pictographic expression itself, such as use of imperative mode, exclamation marks, or thr…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and Languagebusiness.industryDeontic logicmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesEntitlementPublic relationsDirective050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsAction (philosophy)VDP::Anvendt språkvitenskap: 012Artificial IntelligenceSanctions0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesConversationPsychologybusinessConstruct (philosophy)VDP::Applied linguistics: 012Legitimacymedia_commonJournal of Pragmatics
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The language game of lost meaning: Using literal meaning as a metalinguistic resource

2019

AbstractBy literal meaning (LM) we usually refer to a theoretical notion which is at the center of a big debate involving philosophers and linguists with various orientations. At the same time, LM is rooted in a linguistic intuition of the speaker, which we could formulate as follows: words taken in isolation have a meaning. Adopting this general take on LM, we are using a notion of LM that seems incompatible with any research program of a contextualist type; I will show, instead, that in a radically contextualist (and Wittgensteinian) perspective, this notion of LM can have legitimate circulation in particular types of language games. I will propose a recovery of the notion of LM saving th…

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguagecontextualismCommunication05 social sciencesLanguage-gameliteral meaningLiteral and figurative language050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsResource (project management)Literal meaning Contextualism Language Game.0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMeaning (existential)Sociologypropositionlanguage gameSettore M-FIL/05 - Filosofia E Teoria Dei Linguaggi
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