This thesis presents innovative research which uses gender-ambiguous speech to investigate perceptions of speaker-indexical information. In a series of three perceptual experiments perceptions of speaker age, gender and social class are researched. In Experiment 1 listeners heard audio samples, on the basis of which they were asked to evaluate speaker age, gender and social class using a Visual Analogue Scale. Experiment 2 was performed in the interests of investigating how perceptions of the same speaker-indexical information as in Experiment 1 might be shifted when providing the listener with visual information about the supposed speaker. For example, upon seeing a young female face when hearing a phonetic variant, the listener might ...
International audiencePrevious research suggests that speakers perceived to be non-gender prototypic...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Listeners are sensitive to the frequency at which speakers produce sociolinguistic features in utter...
The current study examined the influence of dialect, gender, and group identification on the person ...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
This study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may a...
This study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may a...
This study examined how perceptual sensitivity contributes to gender differences in vocal accommodat...
This work examines the effect of gender stereotypes on the perception of language by draw-ing togeth...
The human voice is a common and important part of the social environment. In addition to being the p...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Previous sociophonetic research has demonstrated that social information affects listeners’ linguist...
This study investigates a possible relationship between perceived and self-ascribed gender identity ...
International audiencePrevious research suggests that speakers perceived to be non-gender prototypic...
International audiencePrevious research suggests that speakers perceived to be non-gender prototypic...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Listeners are sensitive to the frequency at which speakers produce sociolinguistic features in utter...
The current study examined the influence of dialect, gender, and group identification on the person ...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
This study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may a...
This study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may a...
This study examined how perceptual sensitivity contributes to gender differences in vocal accommodat...
This work examines the effect of gender stereotypes on the perception of language by draw-ing togeth...
The human voice is a common and important part of the social environment. In addition to being the p...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Previous sociophonetic research has demonstrated that social information affects listeners’ linguist...
This study investigates a possible relationship between perceived and self-ascribed gender identity ...
International audiencePrevious research suggests that speakers perceived to be non-gender prototypic...
International audiencePrevious research suggests that speakers perceived to be non-gender prototypic...
Listeners’ perceptions of sound changes may be influenced by priming them with social information ab...
Listeners are sensitive to the frequency at which speakers produce sociolinguistic features in utter...