Thinking on Sunday: Talk – The Science of Conversation
17th March 2019 · 3:00pm - 4:30pm
In person | Virtual event
We spend much of our day talking. Yet we know little about the conversational engine that drives our everyday lives. We are pushed and pulled around by language far more than we realize yet are seduced by stereotypes and myths about communication. This lecture will change the way you think about talk. It will explain the big pay-offs to understanding conversation scientifically.
Social psychologist Elizabeth Stokoe has spent over twenty years collecting and analysing real conversations across settings as varied as first dates, crisis negotiation, sales encounters and medical communication. Through numerous examples from real interactions between friends, partners, colleagues, police officers, mediators, doctors and many others, you will learn that some of what you think you know about talk is wrong. But you will also uncover fresh insights about how to have better conversations – using the evidence from fifty years of research about the science of talk.
Elizabeth Stokoe is Professor of Social Interaction in the School of Social Sciences at Loughborough University, using conversation analysis to understand how talk works. Outside the University, she runs workshops with professionals using her research-based communication training method called the Conversation Analytic Role-play Method. She is one of thirteen WIRED 2015 Innovation Fellows; has given TEDx, New Scientist, SciFoo/Google, Cheltenham Science Festival and Royal Institution lectures, and her research and biography were featured on the BBC Radio 4’s The Life Scientific.
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Doors 2.45pm. Start 3pm.
Entry £8, £4 concessions (free to Conway Hall Ethical Society members, who should book these tickets in advance
Event is subject to capacity, without exceptions. Space will be reserved for ticket holders.
Brockway Room (Ground floor – accessible. Induction loop audio).
This is a Conway Hall Charitable Programme and is tax-exempt.