Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, UK.
Cognition. 2021 May;210:104602. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104602. Epub 2021 Feb 4.
Speakers' lexical choices are affected by interpersonal-level influences, like a tendency to reuse an interlocutor's words. Here, we examined how those choices are additionally affected by community-level factors, like whether the interlocutor is from their own or another speech community (in-community vs. out-community partner), and how such interpersonal experiences contribute to the acquisition of community-level linguistic knowledge. Our three experiments tested (i) how speakers' lexical choices varied depending on their partner's choices and speech community, and (ii) how speakers' extrapolation of these choices to a subsequent partner was influenced by their partners' speech communities. In Experiment 1, Spanish participants played two sessions of an online picture-matching-and-naming task, encountering the same pictures but different confederates in each session. The first confederate was either an in-community partner (Spanish) or an out-community partner (Latin American); the second confederate was either from the same community as the first confederate or not. Participants' referential choices in Session 1 were influenced by their partner's choices, but not by their community. However, participants' likelihood to subsequently maintain these choices was affected by their partners' communities. Experiment 2 replicated this pattern in Mexicans, and Experiment 3 confirmed that these results were driven by confederates' communities, rather than perceived linguistic status. Our results suggest that speakers encode speech community information during dialogue and store it to inform future contexts of language use, even when it has not affected their choices during that particular encounter. Thus, speakers learn community-level knowledge by extrapolating linguistic information from interpersonal-level experiences.
说话者的词汇选择受到人际层面影响,例如倾向于重复对话者的用词。在这里,我们研究了这些选择如何受到社区层面因素的影响,例如对话者是否来自自己或另一个言语社区(社区内或社区外的伙伴),以及这些人际经历如何促进社区层面语言知识的习得。我们的三个实验检验了(i)说话者的词汇选择如何根据其伙伴的选择和言语社区而变化,以及(ii)说话者对这些选择的推断如何受到其伙伴的言语社区的影响。在实验 1 中,西班牙参与者进行了两次在线图片匹配和命名任务的会话,每次会话遇到的图片相同,但对话者不同。第一个对话者是社区内的伙伴(西班牙语)或社区外的伙伴(拉丁美洲西班牙语);第二个对话者要么与第一个对话者来自同一个社区,要么不是。参与者在会话 1 中的指称选择受到其伙伴选择的影响,但不受其社区的影响。然而,参与者随后维持这些选择的可能性受到其伙伴社区的影响。实验 2 在墨西哥参与者中复制了这一模式,实验 3 证实了这些结果是由对话者的社区驱动的,而不是由感知的语言地位驱动的。我们的研究结果表明,说话者在对话过程中对言语社区信息进行编码,并将其存储下来,以指导未来的语言使用情境,即使这些信息在特定的对话中没有影响他们的选择。因此,说话者通过从人际层面的经验推断语言信息来学习社区层面的知识。