Title: The Alignment Perspective
1The Alignment Perspective
Approaches to dialogue
Part XIV
Peter Kühnlein/Jens Stegmann
2The Alignment Perspective
Pickering, M. Garrod, S. (2003) Toward a
Mechanistic Psychology of Dialogue, submitted to
BBS, http//www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Garrod/Re
ferees/
3The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions
4The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims
5The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use
6The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use People who can produce monologue
usually can also produce dialogue but not
vice versa
7The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use People who can produce monologue
usually can also produce dialogue but not
vice versa Children learn how to speak in
dialogic situations
8The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in dialogue
9The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue
10The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue
11The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t.
dialogue Purported reasons for neglecting
dialogue
12The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t.
dialogue Purported reasons for neglecting
dialogue Practical reasons it is assumed to be
too hard (or even impossible) to study, given
the degree of experimental control necessary
13The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t.
dialogue Purported reasons for neglecting
dialogue Practical reasons it is assumed to be
too hard (or even impossible) to study, given
the degree of experimental control necessary
But cf. the studies by Garrod et al
14The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t.
dialogue Purported reasons for neglecting
dialogue Practical reasons it is assumed to be
too hard (or even impossible) to study, given
the degree of experimental control necessary
Theoretical reasons psycholinguists tend to
develop processing theories that draw upon
classical, Chomsky-style generative linguistics
(and dialogue is ignored there)
15The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition
16The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-product integration of
ideas from information-processing psychology and
generative grammar
17The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-product integration of
ideas from information-processing psychology and
generative grammar mechanistic accounts of
how people compute different levels of
representation
18The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-product integration of
ideas from information-processing psychology and
generative grammar mechanistic accounts of
how people compute different levels of
representation experimental paradigms
de-contextualized language
19The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-action
20The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-action ideas from
ordinary language philosophy and sociology
21The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-action ideas from
ordinary language philosophy and sociology
mentalistic explanations (intentions, beliefs,
desires, ...)
22The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark draws a distinction between the
language-as-product vs. language-as-action
tradition Language-as-action ideas from
ordinary language philosophy and sociology
mentalistic explanations (intentions, beliefs,
desires, ...) gaining ecological validity
natural tasks, language in context
23The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark is positioned on the language-as-action side
24The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark is positioned on the language-as-action
side He counts as the (main) advocate of the
experimental study of dialogue
25The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark is positioned on the language-as-action
side He counts as the (main) advocate of the
experimental study of dialogue His focus is on
strategies employed by interlocutors (rather
than on underlying processing mechanisms)
26The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark is positioned on the language-as-action
side He counts as the (main) advocate of the
experimental study of dialogue His focus is on
strategies employed by interlocutors (rather
than on underlying processing mechanisms) The
main explanatory notion he employs is that of
coordination of agents
27The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark is positioned on the language-as-action
side He counts as the (main) advocate of the
experimental study of dialogue His focus is on
strategies employed by interlocutors (rather
than on underlying processing mechanisms) The
main explanatory notion he employs is that of
coordination of agents (something Carl doesnt
believe in)
28The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Existing mechanistic accounts rely
almost entirely on monologue, a derivative form
of language use / processing They are therefore
limited / inadequate accounts w.r.t. dialogue H.
Clark is positioned on the language-as-action
side He counts as the (main) advocate of the
experimental study of dialogue His focus is on
strategies employed by interlocutors (rather
than on underlying processing mechanisms) The
main explanatory notion he employs is that of
coordination of agents (something Carl doesnt
believe in)
29The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in dialogue
30The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned.
31The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned Alignment
differs from the classical (Lewis, Clark) kind of
coordination in that it is a psychological
mechanism, not a strategy in behaviour
32The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned The
linguistic representations employed by the
interlocutors become aligned at many levels of
representation
33The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned The
linguistic representations employed by the
interlocutors become aligned at many levels of
representation Alignment is the result of a
largely automatic process
34The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned The
linguistic representations employed by the
interlocutors become aligned at many levels of
representation Alignment is the result of a
largely automatic process greatly simplifies
production and comprehension
35The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned Aspects of
processing following from IAM simple
interactive inference mechanism
36The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned Aspects of
processing following from IAM simple
interactive inference mechanism development of
local dialogue routines
37The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned Aspects of
processing following from IAM simple
interactive inference mechanism development of
local dialogue routines explanation for
self-monitoring in production
38The Alignment Perspective
Core Intuitions Aims State-of-the-Art
Dialogue is the most basic and natural form of
language use Hence, psycholinguistics should
provide an account of the basic
language processing mechanisms in
dialogue Thesis Dialogue is coordinated
behaviour in that the representations
that underly discourse become aligned Also
addressed (evidence for the IAM)
implications of the IAM
39The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment
40The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The maze game
cooperative game two subjects A and B, are
located in different rooms
41The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The maze game
cooperative game two subjects A and B, are
located in different rooms they can communicate
via audio link
42The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The maze game
cooperative game two subjects A and B, are
located in different rooms they can communicate
via audio link A and B have maps of a maze in
front of them
43The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The maze game
cooperative game two subjects A and B, are
located in different rooms they can communicate
via audio link A and B have maps of a maze in
front of them A tries to describe his position
(arrow) to B
44The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
45The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are?
46The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs)
47The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up
48The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side?
49The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second box.
50The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
51The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well right, starting
from the left, youre one along A Uh-huh B
and one up?
52The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well right, starting
from the left, youre one along A Uh-huh B
and one up? A Yeah, and Im trying to get to ...
53The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
28 utterances later
54The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.)
28 utterances later
55The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.) A Two along Im not in
the first box, Im in the second box B Youre
two along
56The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.) A Two along Im not in
the first box, Im in the second box B Youre
two along A Two up (1 sec.) counting the if
you take the first box as being one up B (2
sec.) Uh-huh
57The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.) A Two along Im not in
the first box, Im in the second box B Youre
two along A Two up (1 sec.) counting the if
you take the first box as being one up B (2
sec.) Uh-huh A Well Im two along, two up (1,5
sec.) B Two up?
58The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.) A Two along Im not in
the first box, Im in the second box B Youre
two along A Two up (1 sec.) counting the if
you take the first box as being one up B (2
sec.) Uh-huh A Well Im two along, two up (1,5
sec.) B Two up? A Yeah (1 sec.) so I can move
down one
59The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.) A Two along Im not in
the first box, Im in the second box B Youre
two along A Two up (1 sec.) counting the if
you take the first box as being one up B (2
sec.) Uh-huh A Well Im two along, two up (1,5
sec.) B Two up? A Yeah (1 sec.) so I can move
down one B Yeah I see were you are
60The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
At first glance this dialogue looks disorganized
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
61The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
At first glance this dialogue looks
disorganized Many utterances do not constitute
grammatical sentences
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
62The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
At first glance this dialogue looks
disorganized Many utterances do not constitute
grammatical sentences There is shared production
between speakers (7./8., 43./44.)
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
63The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
At first glance this dialogue looks
disorganized Many utterances do not constitute
grammatical sentences There is shared production
between speakers (7./8., 43./44.) The speakers
seemingly do not know how to say what they want
to say (4. vs. 46.)
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
64The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
B You are starting from the left, youre one
along, one up? (2 sec.) A Two along Im not in
the first box, Im in the second box B Youre
two along A Two up (1 sec.) counting the if
you take the first box as being one up B (2
sec.) Uh-huh A Well Im two along, two up (1,5
sec.) B Two up? A Yeah (1 sec.) so I can move
down one B Yeah I see were you are
65The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
At first glance this dialogue looks
disorganized Many utterances do not constitute
grammatical sentences There is shared production
between speakers (7./8., 43./44.) The speakers
seemingly do not know how to say what they want
to say (4. vs. 46.) Assumption dialogue is a
joint activity
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
66The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
At first glance this dialogue looks
disorganized Many utterances do not constitute
grammatical sentences There is shared production
between speakers (7./8., 43./44.) The speakers
seemingly do not know how to say what they want
to say (4. vs. 46.) Assumption dialogue is a
joint activity it involves cooperation between
interlocutors in a way that allows them to
sufficiently understand the meaning of the
dialogue as a whole dialogue is a game of
cooperation
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
67The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
Conversational analysts argue that dialogue
turns are linked across interlocutors This
means that production and comprehension
processes become coupled
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well
68The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment A sample dialogue
Analysis
Conversational analysts argue that dialogue
turns are linked across interlocutors This
means that production and comprehension
processes become coupled Furthermore, the
meaning of what is being communicated depends on
the interlocutors agreement/consensus, and is
hence subject to negotiation (4) - (11)
B ... Tell me where you are? A Ehm Oh God
(laughs) B (laughs) A Right two along from
the bottom one up B Two along from the bottom,
which side? A The left going from left to right
in the second box. B Yourre in the second
box. A One up (1 sec.) I take it weve got
identical mazes? B Yeah well right, starting
from the left, youre one along A Uh-huh B
and one up? A Yeah, and Im trying to get to ...
69The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
70The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
Situation model a multi-dimensional
representation of the situation under discussion
(space, time, causality, intentionality,
individuals) assumed to capture what people are
thinking about while understanding a text
71The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
Situation model a multi-dimensional
representation of the situation under discussion
(space, time, causality, intentionality,
individuals) assumed to capture what people are
thinking about while understanding a text
Think of mental models, Johnson-Laird style, that
always have been in the discussion concerning
inference etc.
72The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
Situation model a multi-dimensional
representation of the situation under discussion
(space, time, causality, intentionality,
individuals) assumed to capture what people are
thinking about while understanding a
text Assumption in successful dialogue,
interlocutors develop (approximately) aligned
situation models
73The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
Situation model a multi-dimensional
representation of the situation under discussion
(space, time, causality, intentionality,
individuals) assumed to capture what people are
thinking about while understanding a
text Assumption in successful dialogue,
interlocutors develop (approximately) aligned
situation models The alignment of situation
models is not necessary in principle but it would
be inefficient not to align (maintaining two
representations of the same situation)
74The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
Situation model a multi-dimensional
representation of the situation under discussion
(space, time, causality, intentionality,
individuals) assumed to capture what people are
thinking about while understanding a
text Assumption in successful dialogue,
interlocutors develop (approximately) aligned
situation models The alignment of situation
models is not necessary in principle but it would
be inefficient not to align (maintaining two
representations of the same situation) Under
some circumstances representing differences seems
to be necessary (deception, concealment)
75The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models
Situation model a multi-dimensional
representation of the situation under discussion
(space, time, causality, intentionality,
individuals) assumed to capture what people are
thinking about while understanding a
text Assumption in successful dialogue,
interlocutors develop (approximately) aligned
situation models The alignment of situation
models is not necessary in principle but it would
be inefficient not to align (maintaining two
representations of the same situation) Under
some circumstances representing differences seems
to be necessary (deception, concealment) Interlo
cutors need not align their situation models
entirely
76The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models How
to align them
In theory, interlocutors could achieve alignment
through explicit negotiation, but in practice
they normally do not
77The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models How
to align them
In theory, interlocutors could achieve alignment
through explicit negotiation, but in practice
they normally do not Global alignment seems to
result from local alignment at the level of the
linguistic representations
78The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Situation models How
to align them
In theory, interlocutors could achieve alignment
through explicit negotiation, but in practice
they normally do not Global alignment seems to
result from local alignment at the level of the
linguistic representations This works via a
priming mechanism, the process is resource-free
(economic) and automatic (unconscious)
79The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations
80The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations
There is evidence for alignment at various levels
of linguistic representation
81The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations
There is evidence for alignment at various levels
of linguistic representation alignment of
lexical processing during dialogue
interlocutors develop the same set of referring
expressions, expressions becomes shorter and
more similar on repetition
82The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations
There is evidence for alignment at various levels
of linguistic representation alignment of
lexical processing during dialogue
interlocutors develop the same set of referring
expressions, expressions becomes shorter and
more similar on repetition syntactic alignment
in dialogue interlocutors tend to repeat
syntactic form
83The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations
There is evidence for alignment at various levels
of linguistic representation alignment of
lexical processing during dialogue
interlocutors develop the same set of referring
expressions, expressions becomes shorter and
more similar on repetition syntactic alignment
in dialogue interlocutors tend to repeat
syntactic form alignment at the level of
articulation reduction, accent and speech rate
84The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations
There is evidence for alignment at various levels
of linguistic representation alignment of
lexical processing during dialogue
interlocutors develop the same set of referring
expressions, expressions becomes shorter and
more similar on repetition syntactic alignment
in dialogue interlocutors tend to repeat
syntactic form alignment at the level of
articulation reduction, accent and speech
rate alignment in comprehension
question/answer pairs with repeated forms more
natural
85The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other levels
86The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other
levels Examples of influences between levels
establishing dialogue lexicons (local
interpretations)
87The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other
levels Examples of influences between levels
establishing dialogue lexicons (local
interpretations) syntactic alignment is
enhanced when more lexical items are shared
88The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other
levels Examples of influences between levels
establishing dialogue lexicons (local
interpretations) syntactic alignment is
enhanced when more lexical items are shared
semantic relations between lexical items enhance
syntactic priming
89The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other
levels Examples of influences between levels
establishing dialogue lexicons (local
interpretations) syntactic alignment is
enhanced when more lexical items are shared
semantic relations between lexical items enhance
syntactic priming The closer the relationship at
one level (e.g. semantic), the stronger the
tendency to align at another (e.g. syntactic)
90The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other
levels Examples of influences between levels
establishing dialogue lexicons (local
interpretations) syntactic alignment is
enhanced when more lexical items are shared
semantic relations between lexical items enhance
syntactic priming The closer the relationship at
one level (e.g. semantic), the stronger the
tendency to align at another (e.g.
syntactic) Important consequences Interlocutors
will tend to align expressions at many different
levels at the same time and repeat each other in
the same way
91The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Linguistic
representations How to align them
Thesis Aligned representations at one level
lead to aligned representations at other
levels Examples of influences between levels
establishing dialogue lexicons (local
interpretations) syntactic alignment is
enhanced when more lexical items are shared
semantic relations between lexical items enhance
syntactic priming The closer the relationship at
one level (e.g. semantic), the stronger the
tendency to align at another (e.g.
syntactic) Important consequences Interlocutors
will tend to align expressions at many different
levels at the same time and repeat each other in
the same way Prediction Dialogue should be
highly repetitive should make extensive use of
fixed expressions (dialogue routines)
92The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Failing alignment
The primitive processes of alignment are not
fool-proof, interlocutors might align only
superficially
93The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Failing alignment
The primitive processes of alignment are not
fool-proof, interlocutors might align only
superficially They might need to be able to
appeal to other mechanisms repair processes -
in order to maintain alignment These mechanisms
(more later) supplement the basic process of
alignment
94The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
95The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
96The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
The prevailing psycholinguistic approach (e.g.
Levelt) transfer of information takes place
via decoupled / isolated production and
comprehension processes
97The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
The prevailing psycholinguistic approach (e.g.
Levelt) transfer of information takes place
via decoupled / isolated production and
comprehension processes no particular
association between levels of representation used
by speaker and listener
98The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
The prevailing psycholinguistic approach (e.g.
Levelt) transfer of information takes place
via decoupled / isolated production and
comprehension processes no particular
association between levels of representation used
by speaker and listener production
non-linguistic idea / message is converted into a
series of linguistic representations
99The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
The prevailing psycholinguistic approach (e.g.
Levelt) transfer of information takes place
via decoupled / isolated production and
comprehension processes no particular
association between levels of representation used
by speaker and listener production
non-linguistic idea / message is converted into a
series of linguistic representations final
representation is converted into articulatory
program intermediate representations serve as
way-stations on the road to production
100The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
The prevailing psycholinguistic approach (e.g.
Levelt) transfer of information takes place
via decoupled / isolated production and
comprehension processes no particular
association between levels of representation used
by speaker and listener production
non-linguistic idea / message is converted into a
series of linguistic representations final
representation is converted into articulatory
program intermediate representations serve as
way-stations on the road to production
comprehension decodes product by converting
into successive levels of linguistic
representation until message is (re-)constructed
101The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The old story
The prevailing psycholinguistic approach (e.g.
Levelt)
102The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension
103The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension production speaker is guided by
what has just been said
104The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension production speaker is guided by
what has just been said comprehension listener
is constrained by what he has just said
105The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension production speaker is guided by
what has just been said comprehension listener
is constrained by what he has just
said Utterances are built up as joint
activities interlocutors align at many levels
of representation
106The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension production speaker is guided by
what has just been said comprehension listener
is constrained by what he has just
said Utterances are built up as joint
activities interlocutors align at many levels
of representation each level of representation
is causally implicated in the process of
communication
107The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension production speaker is guided by
what has just been said comprehension listener
is constrained by what he has just
said Utterances are built up as joint
activities interlocutors align at many levels
of representation each level of representation
is causally implicated in the process of
communication intermediate representations are
retained implicitly
108The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
There is evidence that in dialogue production and
comprehension processes are coupled (Garrod 1999)
with tight interleaving of production and
comprehension production speaker is guided by
what has just been said comprehension listener
is constrained by what he has just
said Utterances are built up as joint
activities interlocutors align at many levels
of representation each level of representation
is causally implicated in the process of
communication intermediate representations are
retained implicitly Because alignment at one
level leads to alignment at others, the
interlocutors can understand each other
(alignment at the level of situation models)
109The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
110The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Core assumptions Successful dialogue involves
the development of aligned representations by
the interlocutors
111The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Core assumptions Successful dialogue involves
the development of aligned representations by
the interlocutors These are brought about by
priming mechanisms at each level of linguistic
representation
112The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Core assumptions Successful dialogue involves
the development of aligned representations by
the interlocutors These are brought about by
priming mechanisms at each level of linguistic
representation percolation between the levels
alignment at one level enhances alignment at
other levels
113The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Core assumptions Successful dialogue involves
the development of aligned representations by
the interlocutors These are brought about by
priming mechanisms at each level of linguistic
representation percolation between the levels
alignment at one level enhances alignment at
other levels repair mechanisms, for cases of
misalignment
114The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channel of alignment
115The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channels of alignment are bi-directional,
direct and automatic unconscious
116The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channels of alignment are bi-directional,
direct and automatic unconscious linguistic
information conveyed is encoded in sound
117The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channels of alignment are bi-directional,
direct and automatic unconscious linguistic
information conveyed is encoded in sound The
communicative mechanism exploited is priming
lexical priming syntactic priming etc.
118The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channels of alignment are bi-directional,
direct and automatic unconscious linguistic
information conveyed is encoded in sound The
communicative mechanism exploited is priming
lexical priming syntactic priming etc. Things
are different with monologue the goal of
monologue is not to get aligned representations
119The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channels of alignment are bi-directional,
direct and automatic unconscious linguistic
information conveyed is encoded in sound The
communicative mechanism exploited is priming
lexical priming syntactic priming etc. Things
are different with monologue the goal of
monologue is not to get aligned representations
representations can rapidly diverge
120The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
Channels of alignment are bi-directional,
direct and automatic unconscious linguistic
information conveyed is encoded in sound The
communicative mechanism exploited is priming
lexical priming syntactic priming etc. Things
are different with monologue the goal of
monologue is not to get aligned representations
representations can rapidly diverge priming in
monologue can be thought of as an epiphenomenal
effect
121The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
The IAM assumes that production and comprehension
draw upon the same linguistic representations
? parity between comprehension and production
122The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
The IAM assumes that production and comprehension
draw upon the same linguistic representations
? parity between comprehension and production A
representation that has just been constructed (in
comprehension) can be used for production or
vice versa
123The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
The IAM assumes that production and comprehension
draw upon the same linguistic representations
? parity between comprehension and production A
representation that has just been constructed (in
comprehension) can be used for production or
vice versa Parity requires the representations
to be the same, but the processes need not be
related (e.g. reversed)
124The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
The IAM assumes that production and comprehension
draw upon the same linguistic representations
? parity between comprehension and production A
representation that has just been constructed (in
comprehension) can be used for production or
vice versa Parity requires the representations
to be the same, but the processes need not be
related (e.g. reversed) of representation is
somewhat controversial among psycholinguists
125The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment The processing model
The new story
The IAM assumes that production and comprehension
draw upon the same linguistic representations
? parity between comprehension and production A
representation that has just been constructed (in
comprehension) can be used for production or
vice versa Parity requires the representations
to be the same, but the processes need not be
related (e.g. reversed) of representation is
somewhat controversial among psycholinguists
might be a means of explaining nonlinguistic
perception/action links
126The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
127The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication
128The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication reflects the pool of background
knowledge that one can reasonably assume to
be shared by the interlocutors on the basis of
the (linguistic and non-linguistic) evidence
at hand
129The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication reflects the pool of background
knowledge that one can reasonably assume to
be shared by the interlocutors on the basis of
the (linguistic and non-linguistic) evidence
at hand related notions common -, mutual -
joint knowledge
130The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication reflects the pool of background
knowledge that one can reasonably assume to
be shared by the interlocutors on the basis of
the (linguistic and non-linguistic) evidence
at hand related notions common -, mutual -
joint knowledge Clarks (1996) notion of CG
(shared basis)
131The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication reflects the pool of background
knowledge that one can reasonably assume to
be shared by the interlocutors on the basis of
the (linguistic and non-linguistic) evidence
at hand related notions common -, mutual -
joint knowledge Clarks (1996) notion of CG
(shared basis) p is common ground for
members of C iff every member of C has
information that basis b holds
132The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication reflects the pool of background
knowledge that one can reasonably assume to
be shared by the interlocutors on the basis of
the (linguistic and non-linguistic) evidence
at hand related notions common -, mutual -
joint knowledge Clarks (1996) notion of CG
(shared basis) p is common ground for
members of C iff every member of C has
information that basis b holds, b indicates to
every member of C that every member of C has
information that basis b holds
133The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Common Ground (CG) is one of the key conceptual
notions in current research on dialogue
critical pre-condition for successful
communication reflects the pool of background
knowledge that one can reasonably assume to
be shared by the interlocutors on the basis of
the (linguistic and non-linguistic) evidence
at hand related notions common -, mutual -
joint knowledge Clarks (1996) notion of CG
(shared basis) p is common ground for
members of C iff every member of C has
information that basis b holds, b indicates to
every member of C that every member of C has
information that basis b holds, b
indicates to every member of C that p.
134The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Implicit common ground (ICG) is information that
is shared by the interlocutors due to alignment
135The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Implicit common ground (ICG) is information that
is shared by the interlocutors due to alignment
it gets built up automatically,
136The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Implicit common ground (ICG) is information that
is shared by the interlocutors due to alignment
it gets built up automatically, is used in
basic repair mechanisms
137The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Implicit common ground (ICG) is information that
is shared by the interlocutors due to alignment
it gets built up automatically, is used in
basic repair mechanisms is effective, because
with (nearly) aligned situation models, both
interlocutors foreground the same information
138The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Implicit common ground (ICG) is information that
is shared by the interlocutors due to alignment
it gets built up automatically, is used in
basic repair mechanisms is effective, because
with (nearly) aligned situation models, both
interlocutors foreground the same
information gets extended as the conversation
proceeds
139The Alignment Perspective
Dialogue and Alignment Common ground,
misalignment interactive repair
Implicit common ground (ICG) is information that
is shared by the interlocutors due to alignment
it gets built up automatically, is used in
basic rep