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Communication --- Semiotics --- Language and languages --- Nonverbal communication --- Non-verbal communication --- Expression --- Semeiotics --- Semiology (Linguistics) --- Semantics --- Signs and symbols --- Structuralism (Literary analysis) --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- Philosophy
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Bringing together the latest studies on Japanese pragmatics, this volume showcases the breadth of research conducted in this ever-expanding, interdisciplinary field, with the introductory chapter providing a useful summary of developments in the field in the past decades. The twelve chapters address a variety of traditional and emerging topics by adopting diverse theoretical and methodological frameworks and presenting a range of perspectives on grammar, interaction and culture. They demonstrate a wide scope of pragmatics research informed by, as well as informing, usage-based grammar, cognitive linguistics, conversation analysis, sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, and literary and cultural studies. Chapters also consider future directions as to how the study of Japanese language in use will continue to offer critical data and analyses to the field dominated by the study of English and other European languages.
Japanese language --- Oral communication --- Oral transmission --- Speech communication --- Verbal communication --- Communication --- Discourse analysis. --- Grammar. --- J5200 --- J5009 --- Discourse analysis --- Grammar --- Japan: Language -- grammar --- Japan: Language -- theory, methodology and philosophy --- Pragmatics
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This volume presents a state-of-the-art of current research on the role of eye gaze in different types of interaction, including human-human and human-computer interaction. Approaching the phenomenon from different disciplinary and methodological angles, the chapters in the volume are united through a shared technological approach, viz. the use of eye-tracking technology for measuring speakers’ and hearers’ eye gaze patterns while engaged in interaction. Envisioned as an ‘innovating reader’, the volume addresses key questions of interdisciplinary relevance (e.g. to what extent can the analysis of fine-grained eye gaze data, obtained with eye-tracking technology, inform conversation analysis, and vice versa?), positioning (e.g. what is the semiotic status of eye gaze in relation to linguistic signaling?), and methodology (e.g. can we strike a balance between experimental control and authenticity in setting up dialogue settings with eye-tracking technology?). The exploration of these and other questions contributes to the demarcation of a burgeoning research program.
Mass communications --- Eye contact --- Gaze --- Nonverbal communication --- Non-verbal communication --- Communication --- Expression --- Body language --- Social perception --- Contact, Eye --- Eye language --- Social interaction --- Psychological aspects --- E-books --- Eye contact. --- Nonverbal communication. --- Psychological aspects.
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The book provides a nuanced, multimodal perspective on how people express events via certain grammatical forms of verbs in speech and certain qualities of movement in manual gestures. The volume is the outcome of an international project that involved three teams: one each from France, Germany, and Russia, including scholars from the Netherlands and the United States. Aspect and gesture use are studied in three Indo-European languages, i.e. French, German, and Russian. The book also summarizes the main points and arguments from French, German, and Russian works on aspect in relation to tense, bringing these historical traditions together for an English-speaking reading audience. The work rekindles some fundamental theorizing about events and aspect, reinvigorating it in a new light with the use of recent theorizing from cognitive linguistics and cognitive psychology, as well as new research methods applied to new data from actual spoken, interactive language use. It illustrates the value of researching the variably multimodal nature of communication – as well as theoretical issues in connection with thinking for speaking and mental simulation – from an empirical point of view.
Events (Philosophy). --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Grammar & Punctuation. --- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Historical & Comparative. --- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Syntax. --- Semantics. --- Aspect. --- Syntax. --- German language --- Psycholinguistics --- Pragmatics --- Russian language --- Semiotics --- French language --- Comparative linguistics --- Nonverbal communication --- Body language --- Speech and gesture --- Gesture and language --- Gesture and speech --- Language and gesture --- Gesture --- Kinesics --- Nonverbal communication (Psychology) --- Interpersonal communication --- Non-verbal communication --- Communication --- Expression --- E-books --- Nonverbal communication. --- Body language. --- Speech and gesture.
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