Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Conventions used in transcripts
- Preface
- Introduction: some implications of a social origin of intelligence
- Part I Primary processes
- Part II The interactive negotiation of meaning in conversation
- 4 On projection
- 5 Interaction sequences and anticipatory interactive planning
- 6 Where does foresight end and hindsight begin?
- Part III Genres as tools that shape interation
- Part IV Expressions of a social bias in intelligence
- Consolidated bibliography
- Index
5 - Interaction sequences and anticipatory interactive planning
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Conventions used in transcripts
- Preface
- Introduction: some implications of a social origin of intelligence
- Part I Primary processes
- Part II The interactive negotiation of meaning in conversation
- 4 On projection
- 5 Interaction sequences and anticipatory interactive planning
- 6 Where does foresight end and hindsight begin?
- Part III Genres as tools that shape interation
- Part IV Expressions of a social bias in intelligence
- Consolidated bibliography
- Index
Summary
In this chapter I shall consider some relationships between sequential patterns or organizations in talk-in-interaction, notably in conversation, and that aspect of social intelligence which Goody has termed ‘anticipatory interactive planning’ (hereafter AIP). Social intelligence consists, in part anyway, of cognitive models of action which might underlie the production and interpretation of ‘meaningful’ communicative behaviour among social beings (humans, and possibly some primates; see Byrne, Chapter 1, this volume). AIP highlights the reciprocity of communication in social relations, incorporating as it does the mental representation of alter's responses to ego's actions (Goody, Introduction to this volume). Goody is thereby suggesting that AIP concerns the possibility that, via their cognitive models of action, interactants have ways of predicting that if they make a given verbal ‘move’ (and from now on I shall refer exclusively to those actions which are verbal), this will engender or facilitate a subsequent verbal action by either themselves or their recipients. The predictability of some contingent subsequent action(s) is part of ‘mentally modelling’ the likely behaviour/responses of their cointeractants, which hence underpins the strategic nature of selecting a current action.
The ability to anticipate subsequent verbal actions, performed in turns at talk, and to select or design a current action (turn) accordingly, would seem to rest on the cognitive representation of sequences of actions. I mean by ‘sequences of actions’ the discernible shapes, patterns, organizations or regularities which may be associated with, or which may be the products of, the progressivity of participants' decisions about ‘what to say next’ in response to what was just said.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Social Intelligence and InteractionExpressions and implications of the social bias in human intelligence, pp. 111 - 138Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
- 31
- Cited by