Communication Accommodation Theory (CAT), developed by Howard Giles from the 1970s onward, explains why people modify their communicative behavior — speech rate, vocabulary level, accent, register, and even non-verbal cues — during interaction. The central claim is that these adjustments are not random or purely subconscious, but are driven by social motives: the desire for approval, the marking of group identity, or the negotiation of power relationships.
Convergence and Divergence
The two primary processes in CAT are:
Convergence: Adapting your speech toward your interlocutor’s style to signal affiliation, approval-seeking, or solidarity. Examples:
- Slowing down speech when talking to a non-native speaker
- Shifting accent or dialect to match a conversational partner
- Adopting the jargon of a group you wish to be accepted by
Divergence: Adapting away from the interlocutor’s speech to assert distinctiveness or mark group boundaries. Examples:
- A Welsh speaker increasing Welsh accent features when speaking with an Anglo-English interlocutor seen as threatening to Welsh identity
- A speaker shifting to more formal register to signal professional distance
Both processes are partially conscious and partially subconscious.
Over-Accommodation
CAT also accounts for over-accommodation — adapting too much in ways that are perceived as condescending:
- Speaking very slowly and loudly to an elderly person
- Excessive simplification of vocabulary with a non-native speaker
Over-accommodation often backfires and signals disrespect.
CAT and Second Language Acquisition
CAT is relevant to SLA in several ways:
- Input modification: native speakers often converge to learners by simplifying vocabulary, slowing speech, and avoiding idioms — this has been studied as foreigner talk
- Identity and divergence: learners who face pressure to assimilate may diverge linguistically as an act of resistance
- Accent acquisition: willingness to accommodate phonologically influences how nativelike learner pronunciation becomes
- Classroom interaction: teacher accommodation patterns affect how learners engage
Related Terms
- Convergence: Moving speech style toward the interlocutor
- Divergence: Moving speech style away from the interlocutor
- Foreigner Talk: The simplified speech native speakers use with learners
- Identity: How language relates to personal and group identity
- Interactional Sociolinguistics: Broader framework including accommodation