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. 2014 Jun 11;9(2):e98598.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098598. eCollection 2014.

Divergence in dialogue

Affiliations

Divergence in dialogue

Patrick G T Healey et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

One of the best known claims about human communication is that people's behaviour and language use converge during conversation. It has been proposed that these patterns can be explained by automatic, cross-person priming. A key test case is structural priming: does exposure to one syntactic structure, in production or comprehension, make reuse of that structure (by the same or another speaker) more likely? It has been claimed that syntactic repetition caused by structural priming is ubiquitous in conversation. However, previous work has not tested for general syntactic repetition effects in ordinary conversation independently of lexical repetition. Here we analyse patterns of syntactic repetition in two large corpora of unscripted everyday conversations. Our results show that when lexical repetition is taken into account there is no general tendency for people to repeat their own syntactic constructions. More importantly, people repeat each other's syntactic constructions less than would be expected by chance; i.e., people systematically diverge from one another in their use of syntactic constructions. We conclude that in ordinary conversation the structural priming effects described in the literature are overwhelmed by the need to actively engage with our conversational partners and respond productively to what they say.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: During the conduct of this study, Healey and Purver were funded at various times by grants from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, Economic and Social Research Council, and Howes completed a PhD, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. Purver has also received funding from the Technology Strategy Board, CreativeWorks London and the European Union Framework Programme 7. He is a Director of Chatterbox Labs Limited, a commercial company which supplies a software service for social media analysis. Healey has also received funding from AHRC, DSTL, Leverhulme and The Wellcome Trust. This does not alter the authors' adherence to all the PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Estimated Marginal Means for Patterns of Syntactic Self-Similarity and Other-Similarity in a Ten Turn Window in the DCPSE.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Estimated Marginal Means for Patterns of Syntactic Self-Similarity and Other-Similarity in a Ten Turn Window in the BNC.

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