社会群体对交际习惯和语言复杂性产生的影响

IF 2.1 N/A LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
M. Atkinson, Gregory J. Mills, Kenny Smith
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引用次数: 12

摘要

语言的复杂性各不相同。对这一观察结果的一个可能解释是,社会因素的差异影响了语言的复杂性:在小规模的“亲密社会”中用于交流的语言,由于它们通常使用的交际环境,表现出更大的复杂性。我们在三个实验中使用了参考交际研究的技术来评估两个社会群体因素——群体规模和公共共享知识的数量——对语言惯例的简洁性和透明度的影响。在实验1中,我们探讨了操纵群体规模的影响,比较了两个说话者互动形成的惯例和三个说话者之间形成的惯例。在实验2中,我们操纵了由三个说话者组成的小组分享谈话相关语境信息的程度。虽然我们发现,涉及更大群体和更少共享背景信息的条件最初导致更长的标签和更多地依赖于更多的文字描述性术语,但从长远来看,这两个因素都没有影响。在实验3中,我们调查了实验1和2的惯例的透明度,通过评估天真个体如何很好地匹配它们的预期所指。我们没有发现任何证据支持这样的说法,即交际环境涉及到与更多的个体交流,或者与较少相关信息共享的个体交流,会产生更透明的约定。我们的实验最终没有为语言惯例的结构是由它们发展的群体形成的这一观点提供支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Group Effects on the Emergence of Communicative Conventions and Language Complexity
Languages differ in their complexity. One possible explanation for this observation is that differences in social factors influence linguistic complexity: languages that are used for communication in small-scale 'societies of intimates' exhibit greater complexity as a result of the communicative contexts in which they are typically employed. We used the techniques from referential communication studies across three experiments to assess the effects of two social group factors-group size and amount of communally shared knowledge-on the brevity and transparency of linguistic conventions. In Experiment 1, we explored the effects of a manipulation of group size, comparing the conventions which develop from the interaction of two speakers, with those which develop between three speakers. In Experiment 2, we manipulated the extent to which groups of three speakers share talk-relevant contextual information. While we found the conditions that involve larger groups and less shared background information initially resulted in longer labels and a greater reliance on more literal descriptive terms, there was no effect of either factor in the longer term. In Experiment 3, we investigated the transparency of the conventions of Experiments 1 and 2 by assessing how well they could be matched to their intended referents by naive individuals. We found no evidence to support the claims that communicative contexts involving communicating with more individuals, or individuals with whom less relevant information is shared, produce more transparent conventions. Our experiments ultimately provide no support for the idea that the structure of linguistic conventions is shaped by the groups in which they develop.
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来源期刊
Journal of Language Evolution
Journal of Language Evolution Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
8
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