Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14365/6271
Title: Self-Repair and Motivation in Legal and Medical Simultaneous Interpreting: Reflections From Student Interpreters
Authors: Şener Erkırtay, Olcay
Keywords: Simultaneous Interpreting
Self-Repair
Student Interpreters
Case Study
Effort Model
Publisher: New Bulgarian Univ Sofia, Bulgari
Abstract: The present study examines the similarities and differences in the use of self-repairs by student interpreters during simultaneous interpreting of two different speech types, medical and legal, as well as the underlying motivations behind these repairs. With this aim in mind, this case study involves an English-to-Turkish simultaneous interpreting experiment with 7 senior student interpreters enrolled in Simultaneous Interpreting course at a major university in IAzmir, Tu rkiye, and corroborated with a post-experiment questionnaire and student reflective reports within the scope of Scho n's concept of "reflection". Shen and Liang's taxonomy of self-repair strategies was used for data analysis, and findings were then discussed in line with Daniel Gile's Effort Model. The findings revealed that challenges arising from syntactic asymmetries, cognitive load, and short-term memory triggered student interpreters' self-repairs during the interpreting process. As for the self-repair strategies, repetition comes forward as the most commonly used type in both speech types, yet there is a statistical difference between the total number used in the legal and the medical speech. Furthermore, the students' statements showed no correlation between the number of self-repairs, speech difficulty, and perceived interpreting performance. This finding suggests that self-repair is not always an indicator of poor interpreting performance and error correction; instead, it can serve as a cognitive strategy to manage time, achieve semantic clarity, and enhance the comprehensibility of renditions.
URI: https://doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.25.1.3
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14365/6271
ISSN: 2367-5705
2367-8704
Appears in Collections:WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection

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