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In a sample of 10 professionals interpreting the same source speech in the simultaneous mode, errors and omissions (e/o’s) were found to affect different source-speech seg-ments, and a large proportion among them were only made by a small proportion of the subjects. In a repeat performance, there were some new e/o’s in the second version when the same interpreters had interpreted the same segments correctly in the first version. These findings strengthen the Effort Models’ “tightrope hypothesis” that many e/o’s are due not to the intrinsic difficulty of the corresponding source-speech segments, but to the interpreters working close to processing capacity saturation, which makes them vulnerable to even small variations in the available processing capacity for each interpreting component.
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Daniel Gile
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
HERMES - Journal of Language and Communication in Business
Université Lumière Lyon 2
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Daniel Gile (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69dccf2fd111c0385b3592fb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.7146/hjlcb.v12i23.25553