Abstract
Abstract
This article presents the results of an exploratory study on the timing of turn-taking in face-to-face dialogue
interpreting based on a corpus of interpreted interactions that were recorded with mobile eye-trackers. Our aims were to: (1)
investigate the timing of interpreters’ turns in dialogic interaction; and (2) identify features that have an impact on
interpreters’ turn-taking speed. These include input processing factors (including turn type and turn duration) and gaze, which
have been shown to play an important role in turn-taking. The analysis shows that, although interpreters in our study tend to
orient to the maxim ‘one speaker at a time’, turn transitions between the primary speaker and the interpreter contain more gaps
and longer overlaps than have been found for same-language interactions. It also shows that the type of turn produced by the
primary speaker (question vs. non-question), the primary speaker’s speech rate, and, to a certain extent, turn duration affect the
interpreter’s turn-taking speed. Thus, the present study contributes to a better understanding of the processes that impact the
timing of turn-taking in face-to-face dialogue interpreting.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
1 articles.
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