From belief to behavior: exploring what language research methods truly measure
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36505/TheLinguisticProceedings/2025/16/01/022/000682Keywords:
methodology, self-report, elicited production, conversational analysisAbstract
Research on language use frequently relies on self-report questionnaires. Although efficient, this method primarily captures beliefs about language rather than language behaviour itself. This paper compares three methodological approaches: self-report questionnaires, an elicited-production task based on structured scenarios, and a semi-structured conversational task. Using examples from a study on self-presentation in Polish, the paper demonstrates the different types of data generated by each method, ranging from trait-level ratings to concrete utterances and co-constructed interaction. It is argued that combining these approaches provides a more comprehensive account of language use than relying on any single method alone, offering a broader methodological framework for psycholinguistic research.
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