Profile
Biography
Kobin Kendrick is a conversation analyst who studies language use and embodied action in face-to-face social interaction. He earned his PhD in Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Barbara in 2010 and was a staff scientist in the Language and Cognition Department at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands until 2016 when he moved to the U.K. to become a Lecturer in Linguistics at the University of York.
Career
- Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Research Coordinator (2011-2016)
Staff Scientist (2010-2011)
- University of California, Santa Barbara
PhD in Linguistics (2010)
MA in Linguistics (2006)
Research
Overview
My research examines language and body behavior as resources for action in social interaction. Using conversation analysis (CA), I examine video recordings of participants engaged in everyday activities in order to investigate the basic mechanics of social interaction (e.g., turn-taking, repair, sequence organization, preference), taking a multimodal approach that focuses not only on language but also on the embodied actions of the participants.
Projects
- The recruitment of assistance in interaction
- Gaze direction in conversation
- Addressee pointing in conflictual environments
- Turn-taking in embodied interaction
Research group(s)
- Centre for Advanced Studies in Language and Communication
Collaborators
- Paul Drew (University of York)
- Judith Holler (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics)
Available PhD research projects
I would be happy to supervise research projects that use conversation analysis to examine social actions (e.g., offers, requests), basic interactional organizations (e.g., turn-taking, sequence organization, repair, preference), and embodied actions (e.g., gaze direction), both in English and Mandarin Chinese as well as other languages. I do not work with politeness theory or speech act theory and cannot supervise research projects that use these frameworks.