To save content items to your account,
please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies.
If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account.
Find out more about saving content to .
To save content items to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org
is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings
on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part
of your Kindle email address below.
Find out more about saving to your Kindle.
Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations.
‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi.
‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.
The Iron Age and the Archaic period were a period of profound transformations in Sicily: Greek and Phoenician colonial settlers interacted with the Indigenous communities of the hinterland and played a key role in processes of change that also involved daily social and economic life.
This chapter presents the archaeological evidence from three settlements in western Sicily, dating from between the early Iron Age and the late Archaic period: Monte Maranfusa, in the middle Belice valley; Makella, located in the Eleuterio valley; and the small settlement on the Castello della Pietra in the lower Belice valley.
Chapter 6 addresses carriers of implicit meaning: entailments, presuppositions, and Gricean implicatures, and the organization of genre, interactional, and metapragmatic indicators in the appeals. Particular attention is paid to the information communicated by presupposition, most notably the existence of the various rights invoked by the appeals. The chapter examines the presupposition triggers active in the texts: definite noun phrases, change of state expressions, factive predicates, implicative expressions, iteratives, quantifiers, temporal adverbials, expressions of judging, comparison and contrast, non-restrictive relative clauses, and questions. It addresses issues of politeness and the threats to interactors’ positive and negative face raised by implications of responsibility for violations of human rights by appeal addressees. The chapter accounts for patterns of dialogicality in the appeals: concessions to the appeal addressees and rebuttals of those concessions; invitations to respond to the appeals; and expressions of gratitude for the addressees’ attention to the concerns of the appeals. It concludes with an analysis of metapragmatic indicators in the appeals.
This chapter explores the idea that the concept of dynamical gestalt, defined across a heterogeneous collection of interacting variables/factors/processes (including biopsychosocial factors) and distributed across different scales, can provide a level-free explanation of psychiatric disorders. In this view, all relevant factors are defined by their causal interaction, albeit at different temporal and spatial scales. Accordingly, there is no reason to think that social factors are on a higher level than neuronal processes, or that neural processes are more basic than social factors in the etiology of psychiatric disorders. In combination with the model of interventionist causality, this approach allows for the development of a productive way of explaining psychiatric disorders and for insight into therapeutic practices.
Language is the primary mode of communication for humans. However, nonverbal communication, such as gestures, eye contact, and facial expressions, also play a crucial role. In some cases, these nonverbal forms are even more important than spoken language. For example, pointing is a social behavior observed from early infancy and is documented not only in humans but also in other primates like chimpanzees. This chapter explores how Artificial Intelligence can offer a unique perspective on pointing.
This chapter explores the role of pointing when referring to (non-)local places in everyday conversations conducted in Gija, an endangered Australian Aboriginal language from the East Kimberley, Western Australia. Conversation analytic methods are supplemented by a geospatial approach, which provides a procedure for measuring the angular vectors of pointing gestures and positioning them in ‘real space’. Analyses suggest that pointing is implicated in displays of detailed geographical knowledge and knowledge of recipients’ cultural connections to country. These types of bodily and verbal displays are fitted to recounting events that transpired on local Gija country. This level of detail is not required for events that occurred in nonlocal environments. This chapter aims to expand understandings of pointing as tied to the wider ecology of speakers’ cultural and communicative contexts, and, for these speakers of Gija, as grounded in displays of knowledge of country and land associations.
This chapter explores practical strategies for sparking students’ interest and curiosity in statistics as lectures and classes commence, and for sustaining their engagement throughout the learning journey. It focuses on the benefits of capturing attention at the outset, encouraging open discussions, and creating a supportive environment where students feel confident to ask questions and seek help. By setting the scene for active participation and fostering a sense of curiosity, the chapter demonstrates how inclusive and student-centred teaching can transform statistics into a subject that feels relevant, accessible, and even enjoyable. Student perspectives highlight what truly makes a difference in their learning experience.
This chapter presents a pedagogical approach to ending lectures and classes in a way that ensures students leave the teaching rooms with clarity and no lingering questions. By encouraging reflection on the material covered, it stimulates meaningful questions and discussions. The core message – learning from mistakes – empowers students and fosters a growth mindset. This approach helps improve class and lecture attendance and promotes timely homework submissions. Student feedback demonstrates how these outcomes are consistently achieved.
The study of conversational interaction among second language (L2) learners and their interlocutors has been central to the study of second language acquisition since the beginning of the 1980s. Numerous studies have shown the facilitative role of interaction for L2 acquisition and several factors that influence the process have been identified and investigated in depth. The main aim of this chapter is to provide the reader with updated information on three particular areas in which research has grown in the past decade, namely the mediating role of individual differences in the process of interaction, interaction in technology-mediated environments and child interaction in low-input (foreign language) contexts. The first two topics are of general interest for the cognitive-interactionist framework, while the third focuses on an underresearched population about which basically no studies were published in the previous decade. The major findings in those three areas will be highlighted and lines for further research identified.
Chapter 2 focuses on offensive language, positioned at the midpoint in the spectrum discussed in the first chapter. We situate offence and the acts of causing and taking offence in the theory of (im)politeness. The chapter reviews the development of (im)politeness theory through three waves and situates the current book within this theoretical progression. In this chapter, building on the previous literature, we also propose a model of offence which distinguishes between legal and moral (interactional) transgressions. To discuss the legal side, we focus on UK law, examining the challenges surrounding the concept of grossly offensive through a discussion of several high-profile cases. We also focus on moral-order transgressions which occur when interactional norms are breached. The chapter also argues that taking offence, whether face-to-face or online, could be a strategic social action used to, among other things, assert boundaries or influence social norms. As we argue, online offence may function as a tool for collective action, for raising awareness and for promoting social change.
Discussing recent literature on online financial practices, this article argues that ‘finance becoming tech’ assumes the form of particular financial situations in the everyday, to be understood in terms of Erving Goffman’s concept of interaction order. While the interactionist strand in the social study of finance foregrounds the role of techno-social situations in the constitution of finance, this article suggests applying Goffman’s notion of the ‘interaction order’ to that debate and demonstrates the latter’s capability to reconstruct the techno-social mechanisms through which finance emerges in the everyday. Unlike the notion of ‘situation’, that of ‘interaction order’ addresses the constitution of situational boundaries through interactional procedures as they refer only partially and selectively to circumstances of their social contexts. Against this background, online financial practices are analytically contoured as techno-social situations that enable the emergence of finance as a matter of the everyday. It is argued that the enabling condition for this commingling of everyday and financial processes is a specific delimitation of the digital-financial interaction order from parts of its political economic context – in particular, the uncertainty that structurally characterizes the financial economy.
Research findings in linguistics have contributed to the development of the field of second language acquisition since its inception. However, it is only relatively recently that an interactional linguistics approach, conceptualizing language as a co-constructed semiotic resource and emergent phenomenon, has been utilized for research in the field. Our chapter introduces a rigorous method for the analysis of dialogic interaction (often spoken language data), called Conversation Analysis (CA), originally developed in the field of sociology. We discuss CA’s origins, core principles, and natural fit as a method for linguistic analysis. The chapter then surveys research that has used CA methods for understanding SLA including how CA methods played a role in reconceptualizing what it means to be competent in a language. Lastly, we present a short summary of one research study using CA methods, and two activities grounded in CA principles that language teachers might consider adding to their repertoire.
This paper presents the theory of improvisational emergence, an account of how social phenomena emerge from improvisational processes. I build outward from the small-group improvisational encounter to provide an account of the relationship between individuals, groups, and societies. Social entities, including groups and societies, emerge from people engaged in group improvisation. But even though social entities emerge from individuals in interaction, their study cannot be reduced to the study of individuals, because once having emerged, social entities have causal power over individuals. The theory of improvisational emergence addresses the structure-agency relationship and the micro-macro debate in sociological theory. It moves beyond practice and structuration theories in positing an ontological separation between people and society. Improvisational emergence allows us to explain the relationship between the improvisational creativity of each participating individual and the collective improvisationality of the group. A complete understanding of social phenomena, including social structures, norms, and cultures, must be grounded in the theoretical and empirical study of creative improvisation.
To determine whether gestational vitamin D status modulates the effect of pre-pregnancy obesity on gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) risk while stratifying by maternal age.
Design:
Birth cohort.
Setting:
A major maternity hospital in Kuwait.
Participants:
Pregnant women in their second/third trimester of gestation were enrolled. Pre-pregnancy BMI (kg/m2) was categorised as under/normal weight (< 25·0), overweight (25·0 to < 30·0) and obesity (≥ 30·0). Gestational 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations were categorised as deficiency (< 50 nmol/l) or insufficiency/sufficiency (≥ 50 nmol/l). GDM status was ascertained according to international guidelines. Adjusted OR (aOR) and 95 % CI were estimated using logistic regression.
Results:
Data from 957 pregnant women were analysed, with GDM affecting 166 (17·4 %) pregnancies. Pre-pregnancy obesity and gestational vitamin D deficiency were ascertained in 275 (28·7 %) and 533 (55·7 %) pregnant women, respectively. The association between pre-pregnancy obesity and GDM risk differed according to maternal age and gestational vitamin D status (Pinteraction[BMI × age × vitamin D] = 0·041). Among women aged < 35 years (n 710), pre-pregnancy obesity compared to under/normal weight was associated with increased GDM risk among women with gestational vitamin D deficiency (aOR: 2·72, 95 % CI: 1·18, 6·23) and vitamin D insufficiency/sufficiency (2·55, 1·15, 5·62). In contrast, among women aged ≥ 35 years (n 247), pre-pregnancy obesity compared to under/normal weight was associated with increased GDM risk among women with gestational vitamin D deficiency (6·92, 1·45, 33·04), but not among women with vitamin D insufficiency/sufficiency (1·13, 0·36, 3·56).
Conclusions:
Gestational vitamin D status modulates the effect of pre-pregnancy obesity on GDM risk in an age-specific manner.
Elk Ridge was the largest pueblo in the northern Mimbres River Valley during the Classic Mimbres period. Data from the pueblo and surrounding sites indicate that it was the economic and ritual center of a larger community. Here, we use multiple lines of evidence—including survey data, ceramics, architecture, and faunal remains—to reconstruct the extent and structure of the Elk Ridge community. We see social interaction as the basis for community development, with (1) community members interacting to negotiate access to land, resources, and labor; and (2) communal rituals serving to reinforce cooperation and cohesion. The Elk Ridge community produced ceramics and raised turkeys that were traded to other Classic Mimbres communities, and these exchange networks created social ties between communities. Data from Elk Ridge also document interaction with non-Mimbres communities to the north, revealing a network of cultural interaction across the region. This study illustrates how landscape, location, kin relations, exchange networks, and ritual activities translate into a social community, similar to those we see throughout the US Southwest and elsewhere in the Neolithic world.
This chapter explores the role of law in organizational interaction. In contrast with recent work on international institutional law that seeks to overcome functionalism and make legal sense of interaction, this chapter argues that interaction among international organizations is a legally constituted phenomenon, in two specific senses. First, law constitutes the space of the interaction (that is, the ‘organizational ecosystem’). Second, law provides the background norms for organizational autonomy and the vocabulary for the decoupling of the organization’s practice and its formal goals. Such a decoupling through institutional law allows international organizations to flexibly interact with each other and adapt to external pressures. Thus, in its dual role, international law provides the building blocks of interaction, playing a crucial role before the need to ‘regulate’ interaction even appears.
We define the category of polynomial functors by introducing its morphisms, called dependent lenses or lenses for short, and we show how they model interaction protocols. We introduce several methods for working with these lenses, including visual tools such as corolla forests and polybox pictures. We explain how these lenses represent bidirectional communication between polynomials and describe how they compose. By the end of the chapter, readers will have a comprehensive understanding of how polynomial functors and their morphisms can be used to model complex interactive behaviors.
Fluency is an essential aspect of second language (L2) oral proficiency. Recent studies have demonstrated that L1 individual speaking style is connected to L2 fluency, suggesting that L2 speech fluency does not solely represent L2-specific skills. Furthermore, task mode (monologue vs. dialogue) has been shown to influence fluency. The present study examines the extent to which these two factors (L1 speaking style and task mode) can predict L2 speech fluency, and how such connections are modified by the learners’ L2 proficiency level. The data consist of monologic and dialogic speech samples from 50 advanced students of English in their L1 (Finnish) and L2 (English). The samples were analyzed for speed, breakdown, repair, and composite fluency. The results of multiple linear regressions demonstrated high predictive power for speed, breakdown, and composite fluency dimensions, while the model for repair fluency showed weak predictive power. The results have implications for L2 fluency research.
We prove a scaling limit theorem for two-type Galton–Watson branching processes with interaction. The limit theorem gives rise to a class of mixed-state branching processes with interaction used to simulate evolution for cell division affected by parasites. Such processes can also be obtained by the pathwise-unique solution to a stochastic equation system. Moreover, we present sufficient conditions for extinction with probability 1 and the exponential ergodicity in the $L^1$-Wasserstein distance of such processes in some cases.
Everywhere one looks, one finds dynamic interacting systems: entities expressing and receiving signals between each other and acting and evolving accordingly over time. In this book, the authors give a new syntax for modeling such systems, describing a mathematical theory of interfaces and the way they connect. The discussion is guided by a rich mathematical structure called the category of polynomial functors. The authors synthesize current knowledge to provide a grounded introduction to the material, starting with set theory and building up to specific cases of category-theoretic concepts such as limits, adjunctions, monoidal products, closures, comonoids, comodules, and bicomodules. The text interleaves rigorous mathematical theory with concrete applications, providing detailed examples illustrated with graphical notation as well as exercises with solutions. Graduate students and scholars from a diverse array of backgrounds will appreciate this common language by which to study interactive systems categorically.
Chapter 5 is concerned with sequential aspects of health-oriented interactions and the challenges this poses for corpus research. Two case studies demonstrate how conventional corpus procedures can be augmented with other linguistic approaches to facilitate a critical examination of the relationships between parts of the data that might otherwise be separated in corpus analysis. The first study is an investigation of a thread from an online forum dedicated to cancer – one that is explicitly dedicated to irreverent verbal play. We show how a corpus approach enabled the identification of humourous metaphors and helped us reveal recurrent lexical and grammatical features that facilitate discussion around sensitive topics, enable a coherent identity, and contribute to a sense of community. In the second study we use an approach that was originally applied to the Spoken BNC 2014 corpus to examine interactional data in terms of functional discourse units. We apply this coding framework to a sample of anxiety support forum data in order to document, quantify, and evaluate how various communicative purposes are formulated in forum posts and are met with different types of response.