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== {{anchor|Interview}}Sociolinguistic interview == <!--The page [[Sociolinguistic interview]] redirects here --> The '''sociolinguistic interview''' is the foundational method of collecting data for sociolinguistic studies, allowing the researcher to collect large amounts of speech from speakers of the language or dialect being studied. The interview takes the form of a long, loosely-structured conversation between the researcher and the interview subject; the researcher's primary goal is to [[elicitation technique|elicit]] the [[vernacular]] style of speech: the [[register (sociolinguistics)|register]] associated with everyday casual conversation. This goal is complicated by the [[observer's paradox]]: the researcher is trying to elicit the style of speech that would be used if the interviewer were not present. To that end, a variety of techniques may be used to reduce the subject's attention to the formality and artificiality of the interview setting. For example, the researcher may attempt to elicit narratives of memorable events from the subject's life, such as fights or near-death experiences; the subject's emotional involvement in telling the story is thought to distract their attention from the formality of the context. Some researchers interview multiple subjects together to allow them to converse more casually with one other than they would with the interviewer alone. The researcher may then study the effects of [[style-shifting]] on language by comparing a subject's speech style in more vernacular contexts, such as narratives of personal experience or conversation between subjects, with the more careful style produced when the subject is more attentive to the formal interview setting. The correlations of demographic features such as age, gender, and ethnicity with speech behavior may be studied by comparing the speech of different interview subjects.
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