Jelena Vranjes

List of John Benjamins publications for which Jelena Vranjes plays a role.

Articles

This article presents the results of an exploratory study on the timing of turn-taking in face-to-face dialogue interpreting based on a corpus of interpreted interactions that were recorded with mobile eye-trackers. Our aims were to: (1) investigate the timing of interpreters’ turns in dialogic… read more
Vranjes, Jelena and Geert Brône 2020 Chapter 8. Eye-tracking in interpreter-mediated talk: From research to practiceLinking up with Video: Perspectives on interpreting practice and research, Salaets, Heidi and Geert Brône (eds.), pp. 203–233 | Chapter
A starting point for a multimodal analysis of interpreter-mediated interaction is the discussion on the pros and cons of new technologies especially for new forms of distant, remote or offsite interpreting. More specifically, in this contribution is argued that empirical multimodal analyses of… read more
Vranjes, Jelena, Hanneke Bot, Kurt Feyaerts and Geert Brône 2019 Affiliation in interpreter-mediated therapeutic talk: On the relationship between gaze and head nodsInterpreting 21:2, pp. 220–244 | Article
The aim of this article is to explore how affiliation (Stivers 2008) with the patient is displayed and interactionally achieved in the context of an interpreter-mediated therapeutic dialogue. More specifically, we focus on the interplay between affiliative listener responses – especially head… read more
This paper contributes to the growing line of research that takes a multimodal approach in the study of interpreter-mediated dialogues. Drawing on insights from Conversation Analysis and multimodal analysis, we investigate how extended multi-unit turns unfold with interventions of an interpreter… read more
Vranjes, Jelena, Hanneke Bot, Kurt Feyaerts and Geert Brône 2018 Chapter 12. Displaying recipiency in an interpreter-mediated dialogue: An eye-tracking studyEye-tracking in Interaction: Studies on the role of eye gaze in dialogue, Brône, Geert and Bert Oben (eds.), pp. 301–322 | Chapter
This chapter discusses the findings of a study that used mobile eye-tracking in the context of a naturally occurring interpreter-mediated dialogue. This type of interaction is particularly interesting for the study of gaze and other (non-) verbal resources, as the primary interlocutors have no or… read more