Abstract

This paper explores one way that participants use inscribed objects in their immediate environment as resources for interaction. In particular, it identifies and analyzes a type of embodied response turn found in information request sequences. The data come from a video recording of family members engaged in a joint cooking activity, where they are preparing an unfamiliar dish while following recipe instructions. In this setting, participants and inscribed objects hold varying levels of epistemic rights and access regarding the task at hand. This appears to have consequences for how the interaction unfolds. As participants ask questions about the recipe, respondents repeatedly employ a particular embodied practice of checking and reading aloud the recipe, which I call an inscribed object check. An analysis of this practice and its sequential variations shows how participants draw on verbal, embodied, and environmental resources to fill knowledge gaps made relevant by information requests when the knowledge lies within inscribed objects. The findings contribute to our understanding of the role that inscribed objects play in interaction, as well as how responses to information requests are managed in everyday settings when all participants are relatively unknowledgeable about the task at hand.

Highlights

  • When we interact with others, we use our surroundings to help create meaning

  • I focus on how inscribed objects are made relevant in information request sequences, exploring how these objects help participants respond to information requests and maintain progressivity in talk

  • The present study explores a particular type of multimodal response to information request sequences in everyday settings where an inscribed object is made relevant

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

When we interact with others, we use our surroundings to help create meaning. Through embodied actions like gesture, point, and gaze, we engage with the world around us. The focal practice analyzed in this study is a response turn that is both embodied and verbal in nature, which I am calling inscribed object checks They are employed in the context of a joint cooking activity, where participants are following instructions from an unfamiliar recipe, and someone asks an information-seeking question related to the task at hand. This is a interesting setting within which to examine information requests and responses because of its fluid epistemic nature. =gazes to phone-u:m (0.5) reads-in a large heavy bottomed ↑dutch oven

13 Mom: 14 Kara: 15 16 Mom
Findings
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
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