Voice is a cue used to categorize speakers as members of social groups, including sexual orientation. We investigate the consequences of such voice-based categorization, showing that people infer stereotype-congruent disease likelihood on the basis of vocal information and without explicit information about the speaker’s sexual orientation. Study 1 and Study 2 reveal that participants attribute diseases to gay/lesbian and heterosexual men and women in line with stereotypes. Gay speakers were more likely to be associated with Gay and Female diseases, and Lesbian speakers with Male diseases. These findings demonstrate that likelihood to suffer from diseases is erroneously, but stereotypically, inferred from targets’ vocal information
Objective: To investigate the common stereotype that homosexual males show pitch patterns that mirro...
In three studies (N = 340), we tested whether vocal cues to a person’s sexual orientation prompted s...
Voice‐based sexual orientation (SO) judgements can prompt group‐based discrimination. However, the r...
It is a widespread belief that individuals are able to detect other people’s sexual orientation from...
Thegrowing bodyof literatureonthe recognition of sexual orientation from voice (‘‘auditory gaydar’’)...
Research on the accuracy of ‘gaydar’ judgments has burgeoned but rarely considered targets’ perspect...
Research on the accuracy of ‘gaydar’ judgments has burgeoned but rarely considered targets' perspect...
While the perception of sexual orientation in voices often relies on stereotypes, it is unclear whet...
While the perception of sexual orientation in voices often relies on stereotypes, it is unclear whet...
The growing body of literature on the recognition of sexual orientation from voice (“auditory gaydar...
Listeners rely on vocal features when guessing others’ sexual orientation. What is less clear is whe...
Research has shown that individuals speaking low-prestige language varieties are often negatively ev...
Gaudio (1994) and Pierrehumbert et al. (2004) gave evidence that hearers can identify the sexual ori...
At its core, my dissertation addresses one primary question: What does it mean to sound like a lesbi...
Utterances reveal not only semantic information but also information about the speaker’s social cate...
Objective: To investigate the common stereotype that homosexual males show pitch patterns that mirro...
In three studies (N = 340), we tested whether vocal cues to a person’s sexual orientation prompted s...
Voice‐based sexual orientation (SO) judgements can prompt group‐based discrimination. However, the r...
It is a widespread belief that individuals are able to detect other people’s sexual orientation from...
Thegrowing bodyof literatureonthe recognition of sexual orientation from voice (‘‘auditory gaydar’’)...
Research on the accuracy of ‘gaydar’ judgments has burgeoned but rarely considered targets’ perspect...
Research on the accuracy of ‘gaydar’ judgments has burgeoned but rarely considered targets' perspect...
While the perception of sexual orientation in voices often relies on stereotypes, it is unclear whet...
While the perception of sexual orientation in voices often relies on stereotypes, it is unclear whet...
The growing body of literature on the recognition of sexual orientation from voice (“auditory gaydar...
Listeners rely on vocal features when guessing others’ sexual orientation. What is less clear is whe...
Research has shown that individuals speaking low-prestige language varieties are often negatively ev...
Gaudio (1994) and Pierrehumbert et al. (2004) gave evidence that hearers can identify the sexual ori...
At its core, my dissertation addresses one primary question: What does it mean to sound like a lesbi...
Utterances reveal not only semantic information but also information about the speaker’s social cate...
Objective: To investigate the common stereotype that homosexual males show pitch patterns that mirro...
In three studies (N = 340), we tested whether vocal cues to a person’s sexual orientation prompted s...
Voice‐based sexual orientation (SO) judgements can prompt group‐based discrimination. However, the r...