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Dive into the research topics where Ali Reza Majlesi is active.

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Featured researches published by Ali Reza Majlesi.


Journal of Aging Studies | 2016

Baking together—the coordination of actions in activities involving people with dementia

Ali Reza Majlesi; Anna Ekström

This study explores interaction and collaboration between people with dementia and their spouses in relation to the performance of household chores with the focus on instruction as an interactional context to engage the person with dementia in collaboration to accomplish joint activities. Dementia is generally associated with pathological changes in peoples cognitive functions such as diminishing memory functions, communicative abilities and also diminishing abilities to take initiative as well as to plan and execute tasks. Using video recordings of everyday naturally occurring activities, we analyze the sequential organization of actions (see Schegloff, 2007) oriented toward the accomplishment of a joint multi-task activity of baking. The analysis shows the specific ways of collaboration through instructional activities in which the person with dementia exhibits his competence and skills in accomplishing the given tasks through negotiating the instructions with his partner and carrying out instructed actions. Although the driving force of the collaboration seems to be a series of directive sequences only initiated by the partner throughout the baking activity, our analyses highlight how the person with dementia can actively use the material environment-including collaborating partners-to compensate for challenges and difficulties encountered in achieving everyday tasks. The sequential organization of instructions and instructed actions are in this sense argued to provide an interactional environment wherein the person with dementia can make contributions to the joint activity in an efficient way. While a collaborator has been described as necessary for a person with dementia to be able to partake in activities, this study shows that people with dementia are not only guided by their collaborators in joint activities but they can also actively use their collaborators in intricate compensatory ways.


Dementia | 2018

Embodiment in tests of cognitive functioning: A study of an interpreter-mediated dementia evaluation.

Ali Reza Majlesi; Charlotta Plejert

This study explores how manners of mediation, and the use of embodiment in interpreter-mediated conversation have an impact on tests of cognitive functioning in a dementia evaluation. By a detailed analysis of video recordings, we show how participants—an occupational therapist, an interpreter, and a patient—use embodied practices to make the tasks of a test of cognitive functioning intelligible, and how participants collaboratively put the instructions of the tasks into practice. We demonstrate that both instructions and instructed actions—and the whole procedure of accomplishing the tasks—are shaped co-operatively by embodied practices of all three participants involved in the test situation. Consequently, the accomplishment of the tasks should be viewed as the outcome of a collaborative achievement of instructed actions, rather than an individual product. The result of the study calls attention to issues concerning interpretations of, and the reliability of interpreter-mediated tests and their bearings for diagnostic procedures in dementia evaluations.


Discourse Studies | 2018

Speaking for and about a spouse with dementia: A matter of inclusion or exclusion?

Elin Nilsson; Anna Ekström; Ali Reza Majlesi

This study analyses sequences where people with dementia are positioned as third parties in stories about their own lives. Previous research emphasises how people with dementia are frequently excluded from social encounters, and how others tend to speak for or about them in their co-presence. Drawing on conversation analytic methods when analysing 15 video recorded interviews with Swedish couples living with dementia, we argue that telling stories in which a spouse with dementia is positioned as a third party in his or her co-presence does not have to be an activity of exclusion. Rather, among couples, third-party positioning is a multifaceted activity where couples employ different practices to organise participation frameworks and manage both inclusion and exclusion in talk-in-interaction. Furthermore, we show how participants display joint speakership and counteract actions of exclusion by making use of various communicative resources such as gaze, touch and bodily orientation.


Learning, Culture and Social Interaction | 2012

Emergent learnables in second language classroom interaction

Ali Reza Majlesi; Mathias Broth


Journal of Pragmatics | 2014

Finger dialogue. The embodied accomplishment of learnables in instructing grammar on a worksheet

Ali Reza Majlesi


Journal of Pragmatics | 2015

Matching gestures – Teachers’ repetitions of students’ gestures in second language learning classrooms

Ali Reza Majlesi


The Modern Language Journal | 2018

Instructed Vision: Navigating Grammatical Rules by Using Landmarks for Linguistic Structures in Corrective Feedback Sequences

Ali Reza Majlesi


The Modern Language Journal | 2018

Learnables and Teachables in Second Language Talk: Advancing a Social Reconceptualization of Central SLA Tenets.: Introduction to the Special Issue.

Søren Wind Eskildsen; Ali Reza Majlesi


Archive | 2014

Learnables in Action : The Embodied Achievement of Opportunities for Teaching and Learning in Swedish as a Second Language Classrooms

Ali Reza Majlesi


Archive | 2018

Video data as a method to understand non-verbal communication in couples with dementia

Elin Nilsson; Ali Reza Majlesi; Anna Ekström

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Søren Wind Eskildsen

University of Southern Denmark

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