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CSCW
2006
ACM

Where's the "party" in "multi-party"?: analyzing the structure of small-group sociable talk

13 years 10 months ago
Where's the "party" in "multi-party"?: analyzing the structure of small-group sociable talk
Spontaneous multi-party interaction – conversation among groups of three or more participants – is part of daily life. While automated modeling of such interactions has received increased attention in ubiquitous computing research, there is little applied research on the organization of this highly dynamic and spontaneous sociable interaction within small groups. We report here on an applied conversation analytic study of small-group sociable talk, emphasizing structural and temporal aspects that can inform computational models. In particular, we examine the mechanics of multiple simultaneous conversational floors – how participants initiate a new floor amidst an on-going floor, and how they subsequently show their affiliation with one floor over another. We also discuss the implications of these findings for the design of “smart” multi-party applications. Categories and Subject Descriptors H.5.3 [Information Interfaces and Presentation]: Group and Organization Interfaces ...
Paul M. Aoki, Margaret H. Szymanski, Luke D. Plurk
Added 13 Jun 2010
Updated 13 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where CSCW
Authors Paul M. Aoki, Margaret H. Szymanski, Luke D. Plurkowski, James D. Thornton, Allison Woodruff, Weilie Yi
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