DocumentCode :
475791
Title :
‘The end is near’: Effects of announcing the closure of a speech
Author :
Andeweg, Bas A. ; De Jong, Jaap C. ; Wackers, Martijn
Author_Institution :
Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft
fYear :
2008
fDate :
13-16 July 2008
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
9
Abstract :
ldquoAnd so, in conclusion... rdquo. Speakers often use a textual cue to announce that they are going to finish their presentation. Is the use of such a textual cue a sound ploy to signal the end? Rhetoricians and other writers of textbooks on oral communication do not agree on this issue. Some state that such a signaling device increases the attention of the listener in the last minutes of the speech. Other authors point out that it is a cue to the audience to stop listening and head for the exit and the coffee. There is little experimental evidence for either of the two positions. Does the closing of a speech result in a better remembrance of the last words of the speaker and/or in a higher appreciation of the speech itself? To explore these questions two mini-lectures (length approx. 17 minutes) were constructed and videotaped. From each of these lectures two versions were constructed: one version with an explicit announcement of the closing section and one version without. The tapes were digitally edited in order to obtain 2X2 exactly similar presentations (differing only in a few lines of text: the announcement of the closure). The lectures were shown to four comparable groups of listeners (Ntotal=350). The dependent variables were a mc-question list (covering the closing of the speech) to measure the retention of the listeners and a questionnaire to measure the attitude of the listeners towards the speech. The outcome of the experiment suggests that the attentional stimulus of announcing the closure of a speech could be working in cases where listeners have a rather low interest in the subject of the speech. Referring to the introduction as rhetorical technique helps to add relish to the experience of listening to the speech.
Keywords :
professional communication; speech processing; oral communication; rhetorical technique; speech closure; speech structure; textual cue; oral presentations; peroration; speech structure; transitions;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Professional Communication Conference, 2008. IPCC 2008. IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Montreal, QC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2085-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IPCC.2008.4610194
Filename :
4610194
Link To Document :
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