Leading voices: Dialogue semantics, cognitive science, and the polyphonic structure of multimodal interaction

TitreLeading voices: Dialogue semantics, cognitive science, and the polyphonic structure of multimodal interaction
Publication TypeArticle de revue
Année de publication2023
AuthorsLücking, Andy, and Jonathan Ginzburg
JournalLanguage and Cognition
Volume15
Pagination148–172
Abstract

The neuro-cognition of multimodal interaction---the embedded, embodied, predictive processing of vocal and non-vocal communicative behaviour---has developed into an important sub-field of cognitive science.
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It leaves a glaring lacuna, however, namely the dearth of a precise investigation of the meanings of the verbal and non-verbal communication signals that constitute multimodal interaction.
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Cognitively construable dialogue semantics provides a detailed and context-aware notion of meaning, and thereby contributes content-based identity conditions needed for distinguishing syntactically or form-based defined multimodal constituents.
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We exemplify this by means of two novel empirical examples: \emph{dissociated} uses of negative polarity utterances and head shaking, and attentional clarification requests addressing speaker/hearer roles.
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On this view, interlocutors are described as co-active agents, thereby motivating a replacement of \emph{sequential turn organisation} as a basic organizing principle with notions of \emph{leading} and \emph{accompanying voices}.
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The \emph{Multimodal Serialization Hypothesis} is formulated: Multimodal natural language processing is driven in part by a notion of \emph{vertical relevance}---relevance of utterances occurring simultaneously---which we suggest supervenes on sequential (`horizontal') relevance---relevance of utterances succeeding each other temporally.

DOI10.1017/langcog.2022.30