You say tomato, I say the same: A large-scale study of linguistic accommodation in online communities
Paper i proceeding, 2023

An important assumption in sociolinguistics and cognitive psychology is that human beings adjust their language use to their interlocutors. Put simply, the more often people talk (or write) to each other, the more similar their speech becomes. Such accommodation has often been observed in small-scale observational studies and experiments, but large-scale longitudinal studies that systematically test whether the accommodation occurs are scarce. We use data from a very large Swedish online discussion forum to show that linguistic production of the users who write in the same subforum does usually become more similar over time. Moreover, the results suggest that this trend tends to be stronger for those pairs of users who actively interact than for those pairs who do not interact. Our data thus support the accommodation hypothesis.

Författare

Aleksandrs Berdicevskis

Göteborgs universitet

Viktor Erbro

Student vid Chalmers

Proceedings of the 24th Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics, NoDaLiDa 2023

415-424
9789916219997 (ISBN)

24th Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics, NoDaLiDa 2023
Torshavn, Faroe Islands,

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Jämförande språkvetenskap och allmän lingvistik

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Senast uppdaterat

2025-02-17