The current study implements a speech perception experiment that interrogates local perceptions of Spanish varieties in Miami. Participants (N=292) listened to recordings of three Spanish varieties (Peninsular, Highland Colombian, and Post-Castro Cuban) and were given background information about the speakers, including the parents’ country of origin. In certain cases, the parents’ national-origin label matched the country of origin of the speaker, but otherwise the background information and voices were mismatched. The manipulation distinguishes perceptions determined by bottom-up cues (dialect) from top-down ones (social information). Participants then rated each voice for a range of personal characteristics and answered hypothetical ques...
This article describes the sociolinguistic traits of Cuban-American Spanish, especially in south Flo...
Paper presented at the 11th Hispanic Linguistics Symposium, November 1-4, 2007, University of Texas ...
Knowing nothing about the pictured people other than how they look, which of them do you think speak...
The current study implements a speech perception experiment that interrogates local perceptions of S...
This study explored how second-generation Spanish speakers in South Florida imagine Miami in socioli...
This flyer promotes the event One Voice, Two Attitudes: Perceptions of Spanish and English among Cu...
This project explores discrimination in the perception of Spanish language dialects with the intenti...
In Miami, the massive migratory waves from all over Spanish-speaking America have forever ch...
Previous research in speech perception has shown that perception is influenced by social factors tha...
In 2013, various news organizations—including the Miami Herald, Sun Sentinel, and Business Insider—p...
This study found that monolingual English speakers from Miami speak an English variety influenced by...
Sociolinguists have documented the substrate influence of various languages on the formation of dial...
In this paper I analyzed the Spanish - speaking Caribbean´s dialectal perceptions (Cubans, Puerto Ri...
Spanish speakers constitute the largest heritage language community in the US. The state of Florida ...
Originating in the 1960’s with the work of William Labov, the field of sociolinguistics has given wa...
This article describes the sociolinguistic traits of Cuban-American Spanish, especially in south Flo...
Paper presented at the 11th Hispanic Linguistics Symposium, November 1-4, 2007, University of Texas ...
Knowing nothing about the pictured people other than how they look, which of them do you think speak...
The current study implements a speech perception experiment that interrogates local perceptions of S...
This study explored how second-generation Spanish speakers in South Florida imagine Miami in socioli...
This flyer promotes the event One Voice, Two Attitudes: Perceptions of Spanish and English among Cu...
This project explores discrimination in the perception of Spanish language dialects with the intenti...
In Miami, the massive migratory waves from all over Spanish-speaking America have forever ch...
Previous research in speech perception has shown that perception is influenced by social factors tha...
In 2013, various news organizations—including the Miami Herald, Sun Sentinel, and Business Insider—p...
This study found that monolingual English speakers from Miami speak an English variety influenced by...
Sociolinguists have documented the substrate influence of various languages on the formation of dial...
In this paper I analyzed the Spanish - speaking Caribbean´s dialectal perceptions (Cubans, Puerto Ri...
Spanish speakers constitute the largest heritage language community in the US. The state of Florida ...
Originating in the 1960’s with the work of William Labov, the field of sociolinguistics has given wa...
This article describes the sociolinguistic traits of Cuban-American Spanish, especially in south Flo...
Paper presented at the 11th Hispanic Linguistics Symposium, November 1-4, 2007, University of Texas ...
Knowing nothing about the pictured people other than how they look, which of them do you think speak...