This special issue brings together research that reflects on the status and role of different types of language attitudes, and the methods required to study them. Many linguists distinguish between explicit and implicit attitudes towards language, but more often than not it remains unclear how these constructs are defined, and what their potential significance is for the study of language variation and change. The contributions to this issue address this question by critically reflecting on theory and methodology, by highlighting (and clarifying) the terminological confusion, and by showcasing new methods and tools. It is hoped that this special issue can inspire theoretical and methodological convergence in a notoriously fragmented field, ...
Since the 1960s, language attitude research has known little methodological innovation. We suggest t...
The study of language has changed substantially in the last decades. In particular, the development ...
It was not until 1960 with Lambert, Hodgson, Gardner and Fillebaum that linguists started being scie...
Implicitness, whether it is used in the context of language attitude research (Garrett 2010), work o...
Are attitudes affected by the language in which they are expressed? In particular, do individual pre...
By providing an introduction to language attitude theory, this chapter serves as a reference point f...
In this talk we will present an overview of experimental paradigms originating in social psychology ...
representation of language variation. In line with the strong empirical tradition in Cognitive Socio...
Since the introduction of the matched guise technique in the 1960s (Lambert et al. 1960), there has ...
This talk reports on a research project that studies the perception of language variation in Belgian...
This timely volume constitutes the first book-length account of implicit as well as explicit languag...
With reference to two recent doctoral research projects on ELF, the present article examines the cha...
After decades of relative methodological stagnation, language attitude research is witnessing an inf...
Socio-psychological research has frequently reported low correlations between explicit and implicit ...
Socio-psychological research has frequently reported low correlations between explicit and implicit ...
Since the 1960s, language attitude research has known little methodological innovation. We suggest t...
The study of language has changed substantially in the last decades. In particular, the development ...
It was not until 1960 with Lambert, Hodgson, Gardner and Fillebaum that linguists started being scie...
Implicitness, whether it is used in the context of language attitude research (Garrett 2010), work o...
Are attitudes affected by the language in which they are expressed? In particular, do individual pre...
By providing an introduction to language attitude theory, this chapter serves as a reference point f...
In this talk we will present an overview of experimental paradigms originating in social psychology ...
representation of language variation. In line with the strong empirical tradition in Cognitive Socio...
Since the introduction of the matched guise technique in the 1960s (Lambert et al. 1960), there has ...
This talk reports on a research project that studies the perception of language variation in Belgian...
This timely volume constitutes the first book-length account of implicit as well as explicit languag...
With reference to two recent doctoral research projects on ELF, the present article examines the cha...
After decades of relative methodological stagnation, language attitude research is witnessing an inf...
Socio-psychological research has frequently reported low correlations between explicit and implicit ...
Socio-psychological research has frequently reported low correlations between explicit and implicit ...
Since the 1960s, language attitude research has known little methodological innovation. We suggest t...
The study of language has changed substantially in the last decades. In particular, the development ...
It was not until 1960 with Lambert, Hodgson, Gardner and Fillebaum that linguists started being scie...