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Record Nr. |
UNINA9911011323403321 |
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Autore |
Zima Elisabeth |
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Titolo |
Mobile Eye Tracking : New Avenues for the Study of Gaze in Social Interaction |
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Pubbl/distr/stampa |
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Amsterdam/Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , 2025 |
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©2025 |
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ISBN |
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Edizione |
[1st ed.] |
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Descrizione fisica |
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1 online resource (324 pages) |
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Collana |
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Pragmatics and Beyond New Series ; ; v.351 |
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Altri autori (Persone) |
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Disciplina |
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Soggetti |
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Gaze - Psychological aspects |
Eye tracking |
Conversation analysis |
Interpersonal communication |
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Lingua di pubblicazione |
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Formato |
Materiale a stampa |
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Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
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Nota di contenuto |
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Intro -- Table of contents -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- 1. Gaze in social interaction -- 2. The advent of mobile eye tracking -- 3. The chapters of this volume -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Part 1 Methodological considerations on the use of mobile eye tracking to study gaze in social interaction -- Chapter 2 Why research on gaze in social interaction needs mobile eye tracking -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Epistemological and methodological questions of video recording in EMCA -- 3. EMCA methodology and epistemology and the study of human gaze -- Vis-à-vis -- Side-by-side -- L-shaped -- Semi-circular -- Triangular -- Circular -- Quandrangular -- 4. Testing the reliability of gaze transcription in standard EMCA data versus eye tracking data -- 4.1 Study design -- 4.2 Results -- Study 1a (no sound) -- Study 1b (observer's perspective, with sound) -- Study 2 -- 5. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3 The influence of the specificities of gaze behavior on emerging and ensuing interaction -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Research on pre-activities and pre-sequences -- 2. Data collection -- 3. Customers' perceptions and their relation to subsequent embodied conduct -- 4. Customers' perceptions and their relation to sequence initiations and responses -- 4.1 Search activities |
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and their relation to recruitment sequences -- 5. Discussion -- References -- Appendix. Transcription conventions -- Chapter 4 Mobile eye-tracking and mixed-methods approaches to interaction analysis -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Defining and refining units of analysis -- 3. Mutual gaze during face-to-face interaction -- 3.1 Data and method -- 3.2 Results -- 3.3 Discussion of the quantitative results -- 3.4 Further explaining the observed synchronisation in qualitative observations -- 3.5 Functional quantification -- 4. Conclusion -- References. |
Part 2 Exploring interactional phenomena with mobile eye tracking -- Stationary settings -- Chapter 5 On the relationship between gaze and the German recipient token hm_hm -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Previous research on the function of gaze and the placement of the recipient token hm_hm -- 2.1 The placement of hm_hm relative to the speaker's turn -- 2.2 The function of gaze to mobilise recipient responses -- 2.3 The gaze window hypothesis -- 3. Corpus and methods -- 4. Results -- 4.1 Description of attested patterns -- 4.2 Quantitative distribution of gaze patterns -- 4.3 Analysis of the temporal placement of gaze-mobilised hm_hms -- 4.3.1 Pattern 1 -- 4.3.2 Pattern 1 -- 4.3.3 Pattern 2 -- 4.3.3 Pattern 3 -- 5. The placement of hm_hm in relation to gaze and the Feedback Relevance Space -- 6. Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 6 Gaze aversion as a marker of disalignment in interactions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The role of gaze in disalignment sequences -- 3. Data and methodology -- 4. Analysis -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Chapter 7 Pupil size indicates planning effort at turn transitions in natural conversation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Methods -- 2.1 Data collection -- 2.2 Data Pre-processing and statistical analysis -- 3. Results -- 4. Discussion -- 5. Conclusion -- References -- Appendix -- Mobile settings -- Chapter 8 Laughter and gaze among talkers on a walk -- 1. Gaze patterns in side-by-side constellations -- 2. Gaze and walking -- 3. Laughter and laughables -- 4. Data and methods -- 5. Laughables and gaze during mobile interaction -- 5.1 Overview -- 5.2 Type 1 - speaker's laughter combined with gaze at recipient -- 5.3 Type 2 - no speaker's laughter but gaze at recipient -- 5.4 Type 3 - no speaker's laughter and no gaze, but recipient laughter -- 6. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References. |
Conventions for the transcription of gaze -- Chapter 9 When the establishment of joint attention becomes problematic -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background -- 3. Data and methodology -- 4. How participants manage divergent and competing foci of attention -- 4.1 Sequential resolution -- 4.2 Sequential resolution -- 4.3 Lack of attention sharing -- 5. Discussion -- References -- Chapter 10 Joint attention without language? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Joint attention and the experience of nature -- 3. Data and methods -- 4. Joint attention without language -- 4.1 Walker B bodily co-orients with walker A and produces a verbal uptake -- 4.2 Walker B bodily co-orients with walker A, walker A produces a verbal account -- 4.3 Walker B bodily co-orients with walker A and initiates repair -- 5. Discussion and conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Description of the iconic transcripts -- Appendix A -- Appendix B -- Index. |
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Sommario/riassunto |
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This volume explores the crucial role of gaze in human interaction, with a particular focus on the potential of mobile eye tracking to advance our methodology and understanding of multimodal communication. |
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