Names are rich sources of information. They can signal gender, ethnicity, or class; they may connote personality characteristics ranging from warmth and cheerfulness to morality. But names also differ in a much more fundamental way: some are simply easier to pronounce than others. Five studies provide evidence for the name-pronunciation effect: easy-to-pronounce names (and their bearers) are judged more positively than difficult-to-pronounce names. Studies 1–3 demonstrate that people form more positive impressions of easy-to-pronounce names than of difficult-to-pronounce names. Study 4 finds this effect generalizable to ingroup targets. Study 5 highlights an important real-world implication of the name-pronunciation effect: people with easi...
Names can play an important role in forming first impressions. While much of the literature has demo...
Two experiments are reported that revisit the issue of why people's names are more difficult to reca...
In this normative study we investigated famous people recognition through personal name, using as st...
Processing fluency influences judgment as metacognitive cue. Laham, Koval, & Al- ter (2012) demonstr...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...
We all have a name. However, the consequences of a name go beyond simply identifying individuals. Na...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...
<div><p>When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information ...
Ratings of familiarity and pronounceability were obtained from a random sample of 199 surnames (sele...
The experimenters intended to show support that children have a bias against names that are uncommon...
Social psychologist Dr Simon Laham discusses his research linking the pronounceability of a person’s...
In a world where people are disadvantaged by first impressions and implicit bias, names factor a lot...
Sexual selection has resulted in sex-based size dimorphism in many mammals, including humans. In Wes...
When surnames sound the same as real words, such as “Kidd”, they are often spelled with superfluous ...
People show a preference for the letters occurring in their name (Name-Letter Effect, Nuttin, 1984),...
Names can play an important role in forming first impressions. While much of the literature has demo...
Two experiments are reported that revisit the issue of why people's names are more difficult to reca...
In this normative study we investigated famous people recognition through personal name, using as st...
Processing fluency influences judgment as metacognitive cue. Laham, Koval, & Al- ter (2012) demonstr...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...
We all have a name. However, the consequences of a name go beyond simply identifying individuals. Na...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...
<div><p>When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information ...
Ratings of familiarity and pronounceability were obtained from a random sample of 199 surnames (sele...
The experimenters intended to show support that children have a bias against names that are uncommon...
Social psychologist Dr Simon Laham discusses his research linking the pronounceability of a person’s...
In a world where people are disadvantaged by first impressions and implicit bias, names factor a lot...
Sexual selection has resulted in sex-based size dimorphism in many mammals, including humans. In Wes...
When surnames sound the same as real words, such as “Kidd”, they are often spelled with superfluous ...
People show a preference for the letters occurring in their name (Name-Letter Effect, Nuttin, 1984),...
Names can play an important role in forming first impressions. While much of the literature has demo...
Two experiments are reported that revisit the issue of why people's names are more difficult to reca...
In this normative study we investigated famous people recognition through personal name, using as st...