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dc.contributor.authorChernov, Ghelly V.
dc.contributor.otherSetton, Robin
dc.contributor.otherHild, Adelina
dc.date.issued2004
dc.identifier.isbn90-272-1663-0
dc.identifier.isbn1-58811-583-6
dc.identifier.urihttps://thuvienso.hoasen.edu.vn/handle/123456789/10615
dc.descriptionxxviii, 266 p. : ill.
dc.description.abstractAdopting a psycholinguistic approach to professional SI, Chernov defines it as a task performed in a single pass concurrently with the source language speech, under extreme perception and production conditions in which only a limited amount of information can be processed at any given time. Being both a researcher and a practitioner, Chernov drew from a rich interpreting corpus to create the first comprehensive model of simultaneous interpretation. His model draws on semantics, pragmatics, Russian Activity Theory and the SI communicative situation to formulate the principles of objective and subjective redundancy and identify probability prediction as the enabling mechanism of SI. Edited with notes and a critical foreword by two active SI researchers, Robin Setton and Adelina Hild, this book will be useful to practicing interpreters in providing a theoretical basis for appreciating the syntactic and other devices that can be used by both students and experienced interpreters in fine-tuning their performance in the booth.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherJohn Benjamins Publishing Company
dc.relation.ispartofseriesBenjamins Translation Library ; Vol. 57
dc.subjectSimultaneous interpreting
dc.titleInference and anticipation in simultaneous interpreting : a probability-prediction model
dc.typeBook


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