The Conversational Discourse Unit: Identification and Its Role in Conversational Turn-taking Management

This study investigates how discourse segmentation and turn-taking interact. Mapping syntactic, prosodic and pragmatic units, five types of conversational discourse units (CDU) were identified. Based on this segmentation, associations were examined between the syntactic, prosodic and pragmatic bound...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inDialogue and discourse Vol. 14; no. 2; pp. 83 - 112
Main Authors Hu, Junfei, Degand, Liesbeth
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 04.11.2023
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2152-9620
2152-9620
DOI10.5210/dad.2023.203

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Summary:This study investigates how discourse segmentation and turn-taking interact. Mapping syntactic, prosodic and pragmatic units, five types of conversational discourse units (CDU) were identified. Based on this segmentation, associations were examined between the syntactic, prosodic and pragmatic boundaries and turn-taking, as well as the transition speed after each type of CDU. Results show: 1) The relationships between the three linguistic boundaries and the occurrence of turn-taking were significant, and the association was the strongest for the pragmatic boundaries; it was weaker for prosodic boundaries and the weakest for the syntactic boundaries. 2) The type of CDU influenced the transition speed, with the pragmatic-syntax-bound CDU being fastest. The study highlights the importance of meaning-connection and earlier emergence of the utterance gist in timing turn-taking.
ISSN:2152-9620
2152-9620
DOI:10.5210/dad.2023.203