TY - JOUR
T1 - Lexical Alignment to Non-native Speakers
AU - Ivanova, Iva
AU - Branigan, Holly
AU - McLean, Janet
AU - Costa, Albert
AU - Pickering, Martin J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Albert Costa died on 10th December, 2018. We dedicate this article to his memory. This research was supported by Spanish Government funds (grants SEJ05 62542CV00568007 and PSI 2008-01191/PSIC, awarded to Albert Costa, FPU fellowship AP2005-4496, awarded to Iva Ivanova) and an ESRC grant RES-062-23-0376, awarded to Holly Branigan and Martin Pickering. Heart-felt thanks go to Katy Bellamy, Anna Leonard Cook, Sarah ‘Sez’ Gordon, Wan-Yu Hung, George Kountouriotis, Nien Chen Lee, Oliver Stewart and Anna Vasilyeva for acting as confederates in Experiment 1, to Yolanda Garcia, Jennifer Klimowicz, Sara Rodriguez and Jasmin Sadat for acting as confederates in Experiment 2, and to Kyle Wolff for formatting the final version of the manuscript. We also thank the Editor and two anonymous reviewers for the many useful comments. The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021. Iva Ivanova, Holly P. Branigan, Janet McLean, Albert Costa, and Martin J. Pickering.
PY - 2021/10/19
Y1 - 2021/10/19
N2 - Two picture-matching-game experiments investigated if lexical-referential alignment to non-native speakers is enhanced by a desire to aid communicative success (by saying something the conversation partner can certainly understand), a form of audience design. In Experiment 1, a group of native speakers of British English that was not given evidence of their conversation partners’ picture-matching performance showed more alignment to non-native than to native speakers, while another group that was given such evidence aligned equivalently to the two types of speaker. Experiment 2, conducted with speakers of Castilian Spanish, replicated the greater alignment to non-native than native speakers without feedback. However, Experiment 2 also showed that production of grammatical errors by the confederate produced no additional increase of alignment even though making errors suggests lower communicative competence. We suggest that this pattern is consistent with another collaborative strategy, the desire to model correct usage. Together, these results support a role for audience design in alignment to non-native speakers in structured task-based dialogue, but one that is strategically deployed only when deemed necessary.
AB - Two picture-matching-game experiments investigated if lexical-referential alignment to non-native speakers is enhanced by a desire to aid communicative success (by saying something the conversation partner can certainly understand), a form of audience design. In Experiment 1, a group of native speakers of British English that was not given evidence of their conversation partners’ picture-matching performance showed more alignment to non-native than to native speakers, while another group that was given such evidence aligned equivalently to the two types of speaker. Experiment 2, conducted with speakers of Castilian Spanish, replicated the greater alignment to non-native than native speakers without feedback. However, Experiment 2 also showed that production of grammatical errors by the confederate produced no additional increase of alignment even though making errors suggests lower communicative competence. We suggest that this pattern is consistent with another collaborative strategy, the desire to model correct usage. Together, these results support a role for audience design in alignment to non-native speakers in structured task-based dialogue, but one that is strategically deployed only when deemed necessary.
KW - Audience design
KW - Communicative success
KW - Lexical choice
KW - Picture-matching game
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124015645&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5210/DAD.2021.205
DO - 10.5210/DAD.2021.205
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85124015645
VL - 12
SP - 145
EP - 173
IS - 2
ER -