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- Collaborative_model abstract "In psycholinguistics, the collaborative model (or conversational model) is a theory for explaining how speaking and understanding work in conversation, specifically how people in conversation coordinate to determine definite references. The model was initially proposed in 1986 by psycholinguists Herb Clark and Deanna Wilkes-Gibbs. It asserts that conversation partners must act collaboratively to reach a mutual understanding – i.e. the speaker must tailor their utterances to better suit the listener, and the listener must indicate to the speaker that they have understood.In this ongoing process, both conversation partners must work together in order to establish what a given noun phrase is referring to. The referential process can be initiated by the speaker using one of at least six types of noun phrases: the elementary noun phrase, the episodic noun phrase, the installment noun phrase, the provisional noun phrase, the dummy noun phrase, and/or the proxy noun phrase. Once this presentation is made, the listener must accept it either through presupposing acceptance (i.e. letting the speaker continue uninterrupted) or asserting acceptance (i.e. through a continuer such as \"yes\", okay\", or a head nod). The speaker must then acknowledge this signal of acceptance. In this process, presentation and acceptance goes back and forth, and some utterances can simultaneously be both presentations and acceptances. This model also posits that conversationalists strive for minimum collaborative effort by making references based more on permanent properties than temporary properties and by refining perspective on referents through simplification and narrowing .".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageID "8104647".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageLength "10095".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageRevisionID "652083127".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Backchannel_(linguistics).
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Category:Psycholinguistics.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Collaborative_filtering.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Cooperative_principle.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Discourse.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Grice.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Grounding_in_communication.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Herbert_H._Clark.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Schober.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Noun_phrase.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Psycholinguist.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Psycholinguistics.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Reference.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLink Tangram.
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "Collaborative model".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageWikiLinkText "collaborative model".
- Collaborative_model wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Collaborative_model subject Category:Psycholinguistics.
- Collaborative_model hypernym Theory.
- Collaborative_model type Work.
- Collaborative_model type Redirect.
- Collaborative_model comment "In psycholinguistics, the collaborative model (or conversational model) is a theory for explaining how speaking and understanding work in conversation, specifically how people in conversation coordinate to determine definite references. The model was initially proposed in 1986 by psycholinguists Herb Clark and Deanna Wilkes-Gibbs. It asserts that conversation partners must act collaboratively to reach a mutual understanding – i.e.".
- Collaborative_model label "Collaborative model".
- Collaborative_model sameAs Q5145845.
- Collaborative_model sameAs m.026rnhr.
- Collaborative_model sameAs Q5145845.
- Collaborative_model wasDerivedFrom Collaborative_model?oldid=652083127.
- Collaborative_model isPrimaryTopicOf Collaborative_model.