[Air-l] Turn-taking in email

Ledbetter, Andrew Michael aledbett at ku.edu
Fri Apr 14 05:50:38 PDT 2006


Walther and Tidwell (1995) address chronemics in e-mail from the perspective of social psychology/nonverbal communication rather than discourse analysis. Baron (2004) approaches instant messenger conversations from a linguistic approach, and found some interesting sex differences regarding length of message turns.
 
Walther, J. B., & Tidwell, L. C. (1995). Nonverbal cues in computer-mediated communication, and the effect of chronemics on relational communication. Journal of Organizational Computing, 5, 355-378.
 
Baron, N. S. (2004). See you online: Gender issues in college student use of instant messaging. Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 23, 397-423.
 
Andrew M. Ledbetter
Ph.D. Student and Graduate Teaching Assistant
Department of Communication Studies
University of Kansas


________________________________

From: air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org on behalf of Bernie Hogan
Sent: Fri 4/14/2006 12:40 AM
To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-l] Turn-taking in email



Hi Everyone,

I'd like to leverage the recent and informative discussion on hedges to ask
a related conversation-analysis question. Can anyone point me to discussions
of turn-taking online, particularly via email?

I know of Marc Smith's work with newsgroups and 'answer-people', Loch et.
al.'s paper comparing online and offline turntaking and Rebecca Warner's
work, but that's about it.

Any input is appreciated,

Many thanks,
BERNiE

Bernie Hogan
PhD Student
Department of Sociology
NetLab, Knowledge Media Design Institute
University of Toronto
 
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