Publications
Attardo, Salvatore, Lucy Pickering and Elisa Gironzetti. 2019. Smiling and the Negotiation of Humor in Conversation. Discourse Processes 56 (7) : 496–512.
Machi, Saeko. 2019. Managing relationships through repetition. How repetition creates ever-shifting relationships in Japanese conversation. Pragmatics 29 (1) : 57–82.
Couper-Kuhlen, Elizabeth and Stefan Pfänder. 2019. Turn-sharing revisited: An exploration of simultaneous speech in interactions between couples. Journal of Pragmatics 147 : 22–48.
Akiyama, Yuka. 2017. Vicious vs. virtuous cycles of turn negotiation in American-Japanese telecollaboration: is silence a virtue? Language and Intercultural Communication 17 (2) : 190–209.
Wilson, Steven R. and Elizabeth A. Munz. 2017. Caregiver Confirmation and Children’s Attachment Security During the Transition to Kindergarten. Communication Research 44 (5) : 668–690.
Tay, Dennis. 2017. Time series analysis of discourse: A case study of metaphor in psychotherapy sessions. Discourse Studies 19 (6) : 694–710.
Janan Johnson, Amy and Norah E. Dunbar. 2015. A test of dyadic power theory. Control attempts recalled from interpersonal interactions with romantic partners, family members, and friends. Journal of Argumentation in Context 4 (1) : 42–62.
Filipi, Anna. 2015. The Development of Recipient Design in Bilingual Child-Parent Interaction. Research on Language and Social Interaction 48 (1) : 100–119.
Hofwegen, Janneke Van. 2015. Dyadic analysis: Factors affecting African American English usage and accommodation in adolescent peer dyads. Language & Communication 41 : 28–45.
Peräkylä, Anssi, Johanna Ruusuvuori and Timo Kaukomaa. 2015. How Listeners Use Facial Expression to Shift the Emotional Stance of the Speaker’s Utterance. Research on Language and Social Interaction 48 (3) : 319–341.
Tudini, Vincenza. 2015. Extending Prior Posts in Dyadic Online Text Chat. Discourse Processes 52 (8) : 642–669.
Fussell, Susan R. and Duyen T. Nguyen. 2014. Lexical Cues of Interaction Involvement in Dyadic Instant Messaging Conversations. Discourse Processes 51 (5,6) : 468–493.