@article{oai:teapot.lib.ocha.ac.jp:00004278, author = {石川, 有紀子 and 無藤, 隆 and ISHIKAWA, Yukiko and MUTO, Takashi}, issue = {1}, journal = {教育心理学研究}, month = {Mar}, note = {application/pdf, 学術雑誌論文, This study examined the hypothesis that expression forms of making request vary, depending on what kind of sccial roles is evoked in its situation. First, as a preliminary study, 61 college female students were asked through a questionnaire to write down verbal expressions of requests they would use in several situations. The results were coassified into five kinds of expressions, i.e., direct request, commitment, sepeaker's condition, speaker's goal, and hearer's condition. Direct request was most used in the context of "buying something", speaker's condition in "requesting to repair", and commitment and speaker's goal in others. From this result, three types of social roles, i.e., "clerk-customer", "specialist-client", and "situation in which hearer's willingness is needed", were extracted. In Experiment 1, we found relations between those three types of social roles and direct request, speaker's condition, and commitment and speaker's goal, respectively. In Experiment 2, the same settings were manipulated, and by producing the above three types of social roles, their relationships were confirmed.}, pages = {9--16}, title = {要求表現の文脈依存性 : その規定因としての役割関係}, volume = {38}, year = {1990} }