. . . "RIV/61988987:17250/10:A1101035" . . "1801-5336" . "20"^^ . "12" . "Interruptions and Overlaps in Doctor-Patient Communication Revisited"@en . "264649" . "P(GA405/07/0176)" . "interruptions; overlaps; doctor-patient communication; British National Corpus"@en . . "1"^^ . "CZ - \u010Cesk\u00E1 republika" . "RIV/61988987:17250/10:A1101035!RIV11-GA0-17250___" . . . "17250" . "2010-12-26" . . . "Linguistica ONLINE" . "Interruptions and Overlaps in Doctor-Patient Communication Revisited"@en . "\u010Cern\u00FD, Miroslav" . . "Interruptions and Overlaps in Doctor-Patient Communication Revisited" . "[B025060DA914]" . "The paper offers partial results of a long-term project aimed at the inquiry into the field of medical interviewing. The main goal of the project is to search for communicative strategies of doctors and patients that are capable of conveying empathy and trust. Via an interdisciplinary analysis, based on the data excerpted from the most recent edition of the British National Corpus (2007), the author attempts to bring quantitative and qualitative evidence that doctor-patient communication has undergone significant modifications, resulting in social re-definition of the asymmetrical roles of the main protagonists. The paper draws attention to those communicative practices of doctors and patients that usually result in overlapping speech." . . "Interruptions and Overlaps in Doctor-Patient Communication Revisited" . . "The paper offers partial results of a long-term project aimed at the inquiry into the field of medical interviewing. The main goal of the project is to search for communicative strategies of doctors and patients that are capable of conveying empathy and trust. Via an interdisciplinary analysis, based on the data excerpted from the most recent edition of the British National Corpus (2007), the author attempts to bring quantitative and qualitative evidence that doctor-patient communication has undergone significant modifications, resulting in social re-definition of the asymmetrical roles of the main protagonists. The paper draws attention to those communicative practices of doctors and patients that usually result in overlapping speech."@en . . "1"^^ . . . .