This study takes a look at how people respond to requests
We can use requests to achieve
many different things. For example,
we may want to ask permission to do something (e.g May I get a glass of water?) or to ask for assistance (e.g. Can you help lift this for me?). How do we respond
to requests, though? We can either accept and take action to fulfil the
request, or we can decline.
By analysing peoples’ responses, Mirka Rauniomaa
and Tiina Keisanen looked at how
people use both linguistic and physical actions to fulfil various requests. The
data that they used consisted of 16 hours of face-to-face and in-car
interactions, and a total of 69 requests were identified. Of these, 56 received a favourable
response (i.e. the request was accepted by the person being addressed). The linguistic construction of these
requests was mostly either interrogative (e.g. Can you pass the salt?) or imperative (e.g. Tell us a story), showing that these are the preferred linguistic
structures for asking someone to do something. In addition, favourable responses were shown to prompt
differing levels of commitment.
Consider the following:
1) Will
you put the rubbish out later?
a) Okay
b) I
will
c) Yes,
I’ll put the rubbish out
The response okay in
1a is judged as showing less commitment to the request compared with the
responses in 1b and 1c. As a
result, it’s suggested that responses are made on a scale of commitment and
that the more elaborate the response structure, the more committed the
responder is.
The main focus of the data analysis highlighted how
responses to requests can take two different formats: (1) fulfilment only
or (2) acceptance +
fulfilment. Fulfilment-only
responses involved the physical completion of the request only. An example would be if A asks B for the
salt and B simply passes it to A without saying anything or using any body movement
to acknowledge A’s request.
However, an example of acceptance plus fulfilment would be if B says
something like sure and also passes
the salt. Rauniomaa and Keisanen
observed that the acceptance aspect of the response doesn’t need to be a vocal
acceptance like okay, sure or yeah. Instead, it can be a bodily
gesture such as nodding or giving the thumbs up. They also highlight how acceptance plus fulfilment responses
may serve to buy the responder time so that they may complete the request once
they have finished an ongoing action (for example, if you were asked to pass
the salt but were holding a dinner plate at the time, you might respond Okay, just a sec before putting down the
plate and picking up the salt).
In conclusion, Rauniomaa and Keisanen noted that embodiment
(that is the physical act of doing what is requested) is closely linked to the
structure of request sequences – how much effort or imposition will be involved
in the request’s completion will affect how the request is framed. Also, the capability of the responder to
react immediately or sometime in the future will depend on what type of
response is produced, both verbally and non-verbally.
________________________________________________________
Rauniomaa, M. and Keisanen, T. (2012) Two multimodal formats
for responding to requests. Journal of
Pragmatics 44: 829-842.
doi: 10.1016/jpragma.2012.03.003
This summary was written by Jenny Amos
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