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Neurolinguistics: An Introduction to Spoken Language Processing and its Disorders
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Intergroup Communication and Identity: Intercultural, Organizational, and Health Communication
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Communication and cooperative research centres : a social identity approach to challenges and opportunities
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Michelle E. Riedlinger. - : The University of Queensland, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, 2005
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Stress in Warlpiri : stress domains and word-level prosody
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Pentland, Christina. - : The University of Queensland, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, 2004
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The Machinery of Talk: Charles Peirce and the Sign Hypothesis
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Development of a multi-tiered speech annotation system for accented English
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A corpus-based analysis of transfer effects and connected speech processes in Vietnamese English
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Abstand, Ausbau, creativity and ludicity in Australian English
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Part of Speech Mismatches in Modular Grammar: New Evidence from Jingulu
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Adolescent risk behaviors and communication research - Current directions
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The Relative Frequency of the Synthetic End Composite Futures in the Newspaper Quest-France and some Observations on Distribution
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Patients' interactions with health providers - A linguistic category model approach
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Abstract:
Two studies investigated interactions between health providers and patients, using Semin and Fiedler's linguistic category model. In Study 1 the linguistic category model was used to examine perceptions of the levels of linguistic intergroup bias in descriptions of conversations with health professionals in hospitals. Results indicated a favourable linguistic bias toward health professionals in satisfactory conversations but low levels of linguistic intergroup bias in unsatisfactory conversations. In Study 2, the language of patients and health professionals in videotaped interactions was examined for levels of linguistic intergroup bias. Interpersonally salient interactions showed less linguistic intergroup bias than did intergroup ones. Results also indicate that health professionals have high levels of control in all types of medical encounters with patients. Nevertheless, the extent to which patients are able to interact with health professionals as individuals, rather than only as professionals is a key determinant of satisfaction with the interaction.
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Keyword:
380105 Social and Community Psychology; 751099 Communication not elsewhere classified; Applied Linguistics; C1; Cognition; Implicit Attributions; Intergroup Bias; Language Use; Psychology; Social; Social-psychology; Words
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URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:61870
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14 |
Managing Organisational Writing to Enhance Corporate Credibility
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Written Communication Skills - A Graduate Outcome of Process Engineering Education?
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An ethnogaphic [sic] interpretive approach to describing the clinical practice of registered nurses in the field of medical and surgical nursing practice
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18 |
Lashings of Tongue: A Relevance Theroetic Account of Impoliteness
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Meakins, F.. - : The University of Queensland, School of English, Media Studies and Art History, 2001
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