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  1. Synchrony lost, synchrony regained: The achievement of musical co-ordination. [REVIEW]Peter Weeks - 1996 - Human Studies 19 (2):199 - 228.
    As part of a series of Ethnomethodological Studies of Work, this paper focusses upon a short stretch of a final concert performance of the Saint-Saens Septet by a set of amateur musicians in which timing errors occur but in response to which various manoeuvres successfully restore synchrony. I set out to demonstrate that these afford a strategic access for ethnomethodologists to sets of musicians' practices whereby musical synchrony is ongoingly accomplished. The central curiosity of this study is the set of (...)
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  • Musical time as a practical accomplishment: A change in tempo. [REVIEW]Peter A. D. Weeks - 1990 - Human Studies 13 (4):323 - 359.
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  • Editorial: Social Interaction and the Theater Rehearsal.Axel Schmidt & Arnulf Deppermann - 2023 - Human Studies 46 (2):191-197.
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  • Tasks and instructions on the simulated bridge: Discourses of temporality in maritime training.Mona Lundin & Charlott Sellberg - 2018 - Discourse Studies 20 (2):289-305.
    In higher education programs that train students for professions with high standards of safety, such as aviation, shipping and healthcare, exercises in simulated environments provide opportunities for training in educational settings. This study explores the use of simulators in maritime education, taking an interest in how navigation training is achieved by using simulated environments. By conducting an interaction analysis of video data, the study examines how training students to coordinate with other vessels in traffic is topicalized in simulator exercises, focusing (...)
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  • Instruction-in-Interaction: The Teaching and Learning of a Manual Skill. [REVIEW]Oskar Lindwall & Anna Ekström - 2012 - Human Studies 35 (1):27-49.
    This study takes an interest in instructions and instructed actions in the context of manual skills. The analysis focuses on a video recorded episode where a teacher demonstrates how to crochet chain stitches, requests a group of students to reproduce her actions, and then repeatedly corrects the attempts of one of the students. The initial request, and the students’ responses to it, could be seen as preliminary to the series of corrective sequences that come next: the request and the following (...)
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  • Applied ethnomethodology: Looking for the local rationality of reading activities. [REVIEW]James L. Heap - 1990 - Human Studies 13 (1):39 - 72.
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  • Work to make simulation work: ‘Realism’, instructional correction and the body in training.Avijit Banerjee, Lewis Hyland & Jon Hindmarsh - 2014 - Discourse Studies 16 (2):247-269.
    This article explores the organization of instructional corrections in pre-clinical dental education. The students are practising manual skills using a simulator and tutors are inspecting and evaluating their progress. Simulators and simulation are critical to the organization of contemporary healthcare training, and the academic literature that explores forms of simulation in healthcare tends to consider the ‘fidelity’ of systems and the extent to which they match the clinical situations that they are designed to mimic. In contrast, this article considers how (...)
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  • Repair: The Interface Between Interaction and Cognition.Saul Albert & J. P. de Ruiter - 2018 - Topics in Cognitive Science 10 (2):279-313.
    Albert and De Ruiter provide an introduction to the Conversation Analytic approach to ‘repair’: the ways in which people detect and deal with troubles in speaking, hearing and understanding in conversation. They explain the basic turn‐taking structures involved, provide examples, explain recent developments in the field and highlight some important points of contact and contrast with work in the Cognitive Sciences.
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