The doctoral work, on which this book is based, was awarded the IPA PhD Thesis Award for the “Best PhD Thesis in the broad area of Phonetics, Speech Sciences, and Laboratory Phonology” in 2024.
Simona Sbranna studied linguistics and foreign language teaching at the University of Salerno. She pursued her doctoral studies at the University of Cologne, focusing on prosody and interactional fluency in second language acquisition, with particular attention to Italian learners of German. In her postdoctoral research, she explored interactional features such as multimodal feedback signals and disfluency phenomena. Her current research interest concerns the multidimensional nature of second language face-to-face interaction, examining how vocal, visual, and emotional cues shape communication.