Litcius/Paper detail

Lexical alignment is affected by addressee but not speaker nativeness

Ellise Suffill, Timea Kutasi, Martin J. Pickering, Holly P. Branigan

2021Bilingualism Language and Cognition30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Interlocutors tend to refer to objects using the same names as each other. We investigated whether native and non-native interlocutors’ tendency to do so is influenced by speakers’ nativeness and by their beliefs about an interlocutor's nativeness. A native or non-native participant and a native or non-native confederate directed each other around a map to deliver objects to locations. We manipulated whether confederates referred to objects using a favored or disfavored name, while controlling for confederates’ language behavior. We found evidence of audience design for native and non-native addressees: participants were more likely to use a disfavored name after a non-native confederate used that name than after a native confederate used that name; this tendency did not differ between native and non-native participants. Results suggest that both native and non-native speakers can adapt to the language of non-native partners through non-automatic, goal-directed mechanisms of alignment during cognitively demanding communicative tasks.

Topics & Concepts

Native americanLinguisticsFirst languagePsychologyCommunicationSociologyEthnologyPhilosophySpeech and dialogue systemsLanguage, Discourse, Communication StrategiesLanguage, Metaphor, and Cognition