The paper investigates a sample of ‘backchannels’, a kind of response item, in the Cobuild Corpus. Its object is to chart the occurrence of backchannels in modern English speech, and especially to find out if they can indicate how much of a language sequence is needed for a listener to understand the intended message. The sequences into which backchannels are inserted and their insertion points are therefore classified, and the fairly numerous sequences where backchannels “interrupt” a linguistic unit are singled out for special study. A general conclusion is that in the cases where there is no explicit information about the part of the message following the inserted backchannel, the message will nevertheless mostly be understood even at the backchannel insertion point. A comparison between male and female speakers shows that women use backchannels more than men and that, unlike men, they prefer unemphatic backchannels.
2023. Using video calls to study children's conversational development: The case of backchannel signaling. Frontiers in Computer Science 5
Li, Yanjiao
2023. A Corpus-Based Study on Feedback in Daily Conversation: Forms, Position and Contexts. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 52:6 ► pp. 2075 ff.
Kraaz, Michelle & Tobias Bernaisch
2022. Backchannels and the pragmatics of South Asian Englishes. World Englishes 41:2 ► pp. 224 ff.
Howes, Christine & Arash Eshghi
2021. Feedback Relevance Spaces: Interactional Constraints on Processing Contexts in Dynamic Syntax. Journal of Logic, Language and Information 30:2 ► pp. 331 ff.
Wan, Jenny Yau-ni
2018. Functions of Frequently Used Back Channels in a Corpus of Intercultural Conversations between Hong Kong Chinese (HKC) and native English Speakers (NES). Journal of Intercultural Communication 18:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Rühlemann, Christoph
2017. Integrating Corpus-Linguistic and Conversation-Analytic Transcription in XML: The Case of Backchannels and Overlap in Storytelling Interaction. Corpus Pragmatics 1:3 ► pp. 201 ff.
2015. Lifting the veil on the PRP–client relationship. Public Relations Inquiry 4:3 ► pp. 263 ff.
Peters, Pam & Deanna Wong
2014. Turn management and backchannels. In Corpus Pragmatics, ► pp. 408 ff.
Hesson, Ashley M., Issidoros Sarinopoulos, Richard M. Frankel & Robert C. Smith
2012. A linguistic study of patient-centered interviewing: Emergent interactional effects. Patient Education and Counseling 88:3 ► pp. 373 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 17 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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