Transcription systems for spoken discourse
Table of contents
The vast majority of natural language usage is spoken, and most of it is forever lost in the very next moment. Human memory records very little of it, and very little of it is audiorecorded, much less of it transcribed. Verba volant: the spoken flies away; but fortunately, scripta manent: the transcribed remains.
References
Birdwhistell, R. L.
Button, G., P. Drew & J. Heritage
Couper-Kuhlen, E.
Du Bois, J. W.
Du Bois, J. W., S. Schuetze- Coburn & S. Cumming & D. Paolino
Eckert, P.
Edwards, J A.
Ehlich, K.
Ehlich, K. & J. Rehbein
Gumperz, J. J. & N. Berenz
Jefferson, G.
Johnson, C. E.
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Keseling, G., A. Wrobel & C. Rau
Kowal, S. & D. C. O’Connell
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Matsuhashi, A.
Ochs, E.
O’Connell, D. C.
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O’Connell, D. C. & S. Kowal
Oller, D. K. & R. E. Eilers
Prillwitz, S., R. Leven & H. Zienert & T. Hanke & J. Henning
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Shriberg, L. D., J. Kwiatkowski & K. Hoffmann
Spinos, A.-M. R., D. C. O’Connell & S. Kowal