Publications
Weeks, Mark . 2020. Affect philosophy meets incongruity: About transformative potentials in comic laughter. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (1) : 1–13.
Hall, Christopher and Stef Slembrouck. 2019. Advice Giving, Managing Interruptions and the Construction of ‘Teachable Moments’. Applied Linguistics 40 (1) : 1–22.
Morse, Chris R. and Walid A. Afifi. 2015. I’m Not Rude, I’m Just Moody: The Impact of Affect on Politeness in Initial Interactions. Communication Research 42 (1) : 87–106.
Aline, David and Yuri Hosoda. 2012. Doing being interrupted by noise as a resource in second language interaction. Journal of Pragmatics 44 (1) : 54–70.
Nor, Siti Nurbaya Mohd. 2012. Discourse markers in turn-initial positions in interruptive speech in a Malaysian radio discourse. Multilingua 31 (1) : 113–133.
Bogetic, Ksenija. 2011. Interruptions and the dyadic co-narration of shared experiences in English and Serbian conversation. Language & Communication 31 (4) : 318–328.
Bangerter, Adrian and Eric Chevalley. 2010. Suspending and Reinstating Joint Activities With Dialogue. Discourse Processes 47 (4) : 263–291.
Chevalley, Eric, Sylvie Derouwaux and Adrian Bangerter. 2010. Managing Third-Party Interruptions in Conversations: Effects of Duration and Conversational Role. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 29 (2) : 235–244.
Ekström, Mats. 2009. Power and affiliation in presidential press conferences: A study on interruptions, jokes and laughter. Journal of Language and Politics 8 (3) : 386–415.
Guillot, Marie-Noëlle. 2009. Interruption in advanced learner French: Issues of pragmatic discrimination. Languages in Contrast 9 (1) : 98–123.
Liao, Meizhen. 2009. A study of interruption in Chinese criminal courtroom discourse. Text & Talk 29 (2) : 175–199.
Youngquist, Jeff. 2009. The Effect of Interruptions and Dyad Gender Combination on Perceptions of Interpersonal Dominance. Communication Studies 60 (2) : 147–163.
Menz, Florian and Ali Al-Roubaie. 2008. Interruptions, status and gender in medical interviews: the harder you brake, the longer it takes. Discourse & Society 19 (5) : 645–666.
O’Reilly, Michelle. 2008. What value is there in children's talk? Investigating family therapists’ interruptions of parents and children during the therapeutic process. Journal of Pragmatics 40 (4) : 507–524.
Dattilio, Frank M. 2007. Breaking the Pattern of Interruption in Family Therapy. The Family Journal 15 (2) : 163–165.
O’Reilly, Michelle. 2006. Should children be seen and not heard? An examination of how children’s interruptions are treated in family therapy. Discourse Studies 8 (4) : 549–566.
Guillot, Marie-Noëlle. 2005. Revisiting the methodological debate on interruptions: from measurement to classification in the annotation of data for cross-cultural research. Pragmatics 15 (1) : 25–48.
Bevitori, Cinzia. 2004. Negotiating conflict: Interruptions in British and Italian parliamentary debates. In Bayley, Paul, ed. Cross-cultural perspectives on parliamentary discourse. John Benjamins. pp. 87–109.