Abstract
Spoken contributions in dialogue often continue or complete earlier contributions by either the same or a different speaker. These compound contributions (CCs) thus provide a natural context for investigations of incremental processing in dialogue.We present a corpus study which confirms that CCs are a key dialogue phenomenon: almost 20% of contributions fit our general definition of CCs, with nearly 3% being the cross-person case most often studied. The results suggest that processing is word-by-word incremental, as splits can occur within syntactic ‘constituents’; however, some systematic differences between same- and cross-person cases indicate important dialogue-specific pragmatic effects. An experimental study then investigates these effects by artificially introducing CCs into multi-party text dialogue. Results suggest that CCs affect people’s expectations about who will speak next and whether other participants have formed a coalition or ‘party’.Together, these studies suggest that CCs require an incremental processing mechanism that can provide a resource for constructing linguistic constituents that span multiple contributions and multiple participants. They also suggest the need to model higher-level dialogue units that have consequences for the organization of turn-taking and for the development of a shared context.
- Anthology ID:
- 2011.dnd-2.3
- Volume:
- Dialogue & Discourse Volume 2
- Month:
- May
- Year:
- 2011
- Address:
- Bielefeld, Germany
- Editors:
- David Schlangen, Hannes Rieser, Matthew W. Crocker
- Venue:
- DND
- SIG:
- SIGDIAL
- Publisher:
- University of Bielefeld
- Note:
- Pages:
- 279–311
- Language:
- URL:
- https://aclanthology.org/2011.dnd-2.3/
- DOI:
- 10.5087/dad.2011.111
- Bibkey:
- Cite (ACL):
- Christine Howes, Matthew Purver, Patrick G. T. Healey, Gregory J. Mills, and Eleni Gregoromichelaki. 2011. On Incrementality in Dialogue: Evidence from Compound Contributions. Dialogue & Discourse, 2:279–311.
- Cite (Informal):
- On Incrementality in Dialogue: Evidence from Compound Contributions (Howes et al., DND 2011)
- Copy Citation:
- PDF:
- https://aclanthology.org/2011.dnd-2.3.pdf

















