Interpreting and Communication in Healthcare Open access Peer reviewed

On the relationship between interpreting trainees’ anxiety, disfluency markers and performance scores in dialogueinterpreting

Ana María Rojo López, Ana Isabel Foulquié-Rubio, Francisco Martínez‐Sánchez

INContext Studies in Translation and Interculturalism | Jun 25, 2026

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Results showed a relationship between state anxiety and disfluency markers, as well as between disfluency markers and performance scores, but only when interpreting in the L1–L2 direction, and the importance of stress management in interpreter training is highlighted.

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Abstract The present study explores the relationship between student interpreters’ anxiety, performance scores and disfluency markers during a dialogue interpreting simulation. Work-related stress is a challenging issue in interpreting, contributing to mental illness and poor-quality performance, yet few studies link anxiety to acoustic fluency markers in bidirectional tasks. Twenty-three final-year Spanish interpreting students performed a simulated dialogue interpreting situation in a health care context. Their performance was recorded and their audio data was analyzed with Praat (Version 6.0.43). They were awarded marks based on fidelity (60%), accuracy (20%) and delivery (20%), with inter-rater reliability of Krippendorff’s alpha=0.80. The Spanish version of the State Anxiety Inventory (STAI) was used to evaluate their state-trait anxiety during the task. Results showed a relationship between state anxiety and disfluency markers, as well as between disfluency markers and performance scores, but only when interpreting in the L1–L2 direction. Trait anxiety was not related to any variables. Situational stress was linked to pauses and delivery speed when interpreting into English, and higher disfluency was associated with lower grades. These findings highlight directionality effects and the importance of stress management in interpreter training.

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Ana María Rojo López

first | University of North Carolina at Charlotte | ORCID 0000-0003-4303-9047

Ana Isabel Foulquié-Rubio

middle | University of North Carolina at Charlotte | ORCID 0000-0001-5850-8526

Francisco Martínez‐Sánchez

last | University of North Carolina at Charlotte | ORCID 0000-0003-4645-0333

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BibTeX

@article{Lpez2026relationship,
  title = {On the relationship between interpreting trainees’ anxiety, disfluency markers and performance scores in dialogueinterpreting},
  author = {Ana María Rojo López and Ana Isabel Foulquié-Rubio and Francisco Martínez‐Sánchez},
  journal = {INContext Studies in Translation and Interculturalism},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1075/ic.00156.lop},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1075/ic.00156.lop}
}

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