
Alignment in Communication
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- Alignment in Communication
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Dedication page
- Table of contents
- Introduction
- 1. Subject and motivation
- 2. Why is a new perspective needed?
- 3. Development of the research area
- 4. Outline of contents
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Methodological paradigms in interaction research
- 1. Introduction
- 2. On dependent and independent variables
- 3. The independent variable - the issue of control
- 4. The dependent variable and the problems of defining and counting
- 5. Strengths and weaknesses of different methods
- 5.1 Surreptitious recording of informal interactions
- 5.2 Recordings of informal interactions with consent of the recordees
- 5.3 Task-based but otherwise unscripted dialogue
- 5.4 Director-matcher paradigms
- 5.5 Scripted dialogue with confederates
- 5.6 Classical cognitive psychological experiments
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- A multidimensional activity based approach to communication
- 1. Why interesting?
- 2. What is "communication" and what is "activity"?
- 2.1 Communication
- 2.2 Joint activity
- 3. Some basic features of communication
- 3.1 A multidirectional flow of information
- 3.2 Every communicator both a producer and a recipient
- 3.3 Sensory multimodality and the three semiotic means of representation
- 4. Communication, cognition and context
- 4.1 Several degrees of processing
- 4.2 Coactivation
- 4.3 Types of content in communication and cognition
- 4.4 Sharing of content
- 4.5 Affective-epistemic grounding and stance
- 4.6 Context
- 5. Semantics and communication
- 5.1 Coactivation and meaning potentials
- 5.2 Compositionality and coconstruction
- 5.3 Compositionality
- 5.4 Coconstruction
- 6. Concluding remarks
- References
- On making syntax dynamic
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Language-as-action and the nature of linguistic knowledge
- 1.2 Dialogue within an action-based framework: Pickering and Garrod (2013)
- 2. Dynamic syntax
- 2.1 Grammar and coordination in joint activities
- 2.2 Dynamic action-based grammars and dialogue coordination
- 2.3 Incrementality and predictivity within the grammar architecture
- 3. Conclusion: low-level mechanisms for linguistic coordination and emergent intentions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Automatic and strategic alignment of co-verbal gestures in dialogue
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Alignment in co-verbal gestures
- 3. Analyzing gesture use in natural dialogue
- 3.1 What shapes the use of gestures?
- 3.2 Inter-personal coordination effects in gesture use?
- 3.3 Discussion
- 4. Towards an integrated model of strategic and automatic alignment
- 4.1 Speech and gesture production
- 4.2 Gesture perception
- 4.3 An integrated model of automatic and strategic coordination
- 5. Conclusions
- Acknowledgement
- References
- Interaction phonology - A temporal co-ordination component enabling representational alignment within a model of communication
- 1. Motivation for an interaction phonology
- 1.1 Alignment vs. co-ordination?
- 1.2 Co-ordination of alignment in speech communication
- 1.3 Attention, co-ordination, and rhythm
- 1.4 Rhythm and phonology
- 2. A framework for interaction phonology
- 2.1 Entrainment as key process enabling interlocutor co-ordination
- 2.2 Entrainment in interaction
- 2.3 Entrainment in speech communication
- 2.4 Evaluating formal models of entrainment on conversational speech
- 2.4 Summary
- 3. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Communication as moving target tracking
- 1. Computational modelling of human communication
- 2. Communication as tracking moving targets
- 2.1 Entrainment and alignment
- 2.2 Communication and target tracking
- 3. The dynamic inference cycle in human communication
- 3.1 The Action-perception-learning cycle
- 3.2 Dynamic Bayesian inference
- 4. Markov decision processes and policy learning
- 4.1 Communication with rewards
- 4.2 Parsimony and novelty
- 5. Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Language variation and mutual adaptation in interactive communication
- 1. Mutual adaptation as a central phenomenon that a theory of communication needs to explain
- 1.1 Aspects of communication
- 1.2 Mutual adaptation in communication
- 2. A role for linguistic variation in communication
- 2.1 Variability of language use
- 2.2 Social factors of language variation
- 2.3 Individual language processing and linguistic variation
- 2.4 Language variation, adaptation, and communication
- 3. The mechanisms of interactive adaptation, in the context of other factors of linguistic choice
- References
- "The hand is no banana!" On communicating natural kind terms to a robot
- 1. Motivation: Deep evaluation of HRI and the lesson to be learned from it
- 2. The capabilities of the robot (named "Flobi")
- 2.1 Interaction patterns for the tutorial dialogue
- 2.2 Acquiring NKTs
- 3. Problems in the communication between a human and the robot
- 3.1 Intuitive observations
- 3.2 The technical description of the failures
- 3.3 Explanation considering the dialogue structure
- 3.4 Two dialogues, internal coherence and external incoherence
- 3.5 Reasons for failures and how to amend them
- 4. The robot's acquisition of an NKT
- 5. The implication of the HRC research reported for developing a general theory of communication
- 5.1 The robot's learning of an NKT
- 5.2 Probing into arti cial minds
- 5.3 Robots as natural kinds
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Interactive alignment and prediction in dialogue
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 3. Comparing and contrasting the integrated account with other recent proposals
- 4. Conclusion and future challenges
- References
- What is the link between emotional and communicative alignment in interaction?
- 1. Emotion in communication
- 1.1 Emotional communication in humans
- 2. Emotional adaptation
- 2.1 Concepts of empathy
- 2.2 Theories of emotional adaptation
- 3. The link between emotional and linguistic adaptation
- 3.1 Emotional and linguistic adaptation in human-human interaction
- 3.2 Human-robot interaction: A computational three-layered model of emotional alignment
- 4. Future research
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Index
- Contributors
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