ERIC Number: EJ990595
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2012
Pages: 11
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-1368-2822
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Available Date: N/A
Timing of Gazes in Child Dialogues: A Time-Course Analysis of Requests and Back Channelling in Referential Communication
Sandgren, Olof; Andersson, Richard; van de Weijer, Joost; Hansson, Kristina; Sahlen, Birgitta
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, v47 n4 p373-383 Jul-Aug 2012
Background: This study investigates gaze behaviour in child dialogues. In earlier studies the authors have investigated the use of requests for clarification and responses in order to study the co-creation of understanding in a referential communication task. By adding eye tracking, this line of research is now expanded to include non-verbal contributions in conversation. Aims: To investigate the timing of gazes in face-to-face interaction and to relate the gaze behaviour to the use of requests for clarification. Methods & Procedures: Eight conversational pairs of typically developing 10-15 year olds participated. The pairs (director and executor) performed a referential communication task requiring the description of faces. During the dialogues both participants wore head-mounted eye trackers. All gazes were recorded and categorized according to the area fixated (Task, Face, Off). The verbal context for all instances of gaze at the partner's face was identified and categorized using time-course analysis. Outcomes & Results: The results showed that the executor spends almost 90% of the time fixating the gaze on the task, 10% on the director's face and less than 0.5% elsewhere. Turn shift, primarily requests for clarification, and back channelling significantly predicted the executors' gaze to the face of the task director. The distribution of types of requests showed that requests for previously unmentioned information were significantly more likely to be associated with gaze at the director. Conclusions & Implications: The study shows that the executors' gaze at the director accompanies important dynamic shifts in the dialogue. The association with requests for clarification indicates that gaze at the director can be used to monitor the response with two modalities. Furthermore, the significantly higher association with requests for previously unmentioned information indicates that gaze may be used to emphasize the verbal content. The results will be used as a reference for studies of gaze behaviour in clinical populations with hearing and language impairments. (Contains 7 figures.)
Descriptors: Human Body, Language Impairments, Speech Communication, Eye Movements, Children, Adolescents, Probability, Statistical Analysis
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
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