Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks

Salience is often used in linguistics to refer to the importance given to a certain part of a discourse such as a word, phrase, or grammatical function (Col, 2011). As such, question sequences can be considered a tool used to make a certain topic more salient because they represent the repetition of...

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Main Authors: Michele Cardo, Agnès Celle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2024-08-01
Series:Anglophonia
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/6005
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author Michele Cardo
Agnès Celle
author_facet Michele Cardo
Agnès Celle
author_sort Michele Cardo
collection DOAJ
description Salience is often used in linguistics to refer to the importance given to a certain part of a discourse such as a word, phrase, or grammatical function (Col, 2011). As such, question sequences can be considered a tool used to make a certain topic more salient because they represent the repetition of a certain linguistic device. Moreover, the repetitive nature of a question sequence has the tendency to affect the audience’s attention in a particular way and might lead to the perception of greater emphasis on topics addressed in the question sequences. It may be difficult to quantify emphatic salience because of the subjective nature of discourse perception. However, there are some measures which can be used and have been discussed in previous literature. Following Falk (2014:4)’s idea that “the key characteristic of salience is its function to encode predictability or likelihood of continuous or discontinuous (previous / next) mention of a discourse part in the mental model throughout time,” this paper considers how question sequences are used by TED talk presenters to create a discourse framework which prompts the audience to understand the importance of a certain subject. Furthermore, question sequences in TED talks may be used to manipulate the audience’s attention in either a forward- or backward-looking manner.Through the analysis of a transcribed corpus of TED talks in English, as studied in Celle and Liégeois (2021), this paper examines question sequences in a corpus of 18 transcribed TED talks by presenters with various backgrounds. Through a proposed hierarchy of question sequences, we attempt to understand how question sequences can be used to make a topic more salient and create a sense of anticipation on the part of the audience. This relates directly to previous work on linguistic salience and helps us to develop an understanding of how questions might play a role in presentational dialogue games.
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spelling doaj-art-1039a1eedfc74e978cf80188dd87aa1e2025-01-30T12:33:13ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662024-08-013710.4000/12poeQuestion Sequences and Salience in TED TalksMichele CardoAgnès CelleSalience is often used in linguistics to refer to the importance given to a certain part of a discourse such as a word, phrase, or grammatical function (Col, 2011). As such, question sequences can be considered a tool used to make a certain topic more salient because they represent the repetition of a certain linguistic device. Moreover, the repetitive nature of a question sequence has the tendency to affect the audience’s attention in a particular way and might lead to the perception of greater emphasis on topics addressed in the question sequences. It may be difficult to quantify emphatic salience because of the subjective nature of discourse perception. However, there are some measures which can be used and have been discussed in previous literature. Following Falk (2014:4)’s idea that “the key characteristic of salience is its function to encode predictability or likelihood of continuous or discontinuous (previous / next) mention of a discourse part in the mental model throughout time,” this paper considers how question sequences are used by TED talk presenters to create a discourse framework which prompts the audience to understand the importance of a certain subject. Furthermore, question sequences in TED talks may be used to manipulate the audience’s attention in either a forward- or backward-looking manner.Through the analysis of a transcribed corpus of TED talks in English, as studied in Celle and Liégeois (2021), this paper examines question sequences in a corpus of 18 transcribed TED talks by presenters with various backgrounds. Through a proposed hierarchy of question sequences, we attempt to understand how question sequences can be used to make a topic more salient and create a sense of anticipation on the part of the audience. This relates directly to previous work on linguistic salience and helps us to develop an understanding of how questions might play a role in presentational dialogue games.https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/6005saliencequestion sequencesquestionsTED talksdiscourse structure
spellingShingle Michele Cardo
Agnès Celle
Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks
Anglophonia
salience
question sequences
questions
TED talks
discourse structure
title Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks
title_full Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks
title_fullStr Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks
title_full_unstemmed Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks
title_short Question Sequences and Salience in TED Talks
title_sort question sequences and salience in ted talks
topic salience
question sequences
questions
TED talks
discourse structure
url https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/6005
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