Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/

Previous work has found that speakers who move to a new dialect region may come to adopt features of the second dialect. This study investigates whether other types of dialect exposure – those present without ever leaving one’s home dialectal region – similarly result in differences in language use....

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Main Author: Lauren B. Schmidt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2015-05-01
Series:Borealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/borealis/article/view/3284
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spelling doaj-827e48fdcdcc4364acf23a071ed3676f2020-11-24T22:21:18ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingBorealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics1893-32112015-05-014110.7557/1.4.1.32843284Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/Lauren B. Schmidt0San Diego State UniversityPrevious work has found that speakers who move to a new dialect region may come to adopt features of the second dialect. This study investigates whether other types of dialect exposure – those present without ever leaving one’s home dialectal region – similarly result in differences in language use. An identification task and a dialect contact questionnaire were administered to two Spanish-speaking dialect groups in Latin America to determine the effect of different types of dialect contact on the perceptual categorization of the regionally and socially variable feature of syllable-final /s/-aspiration (e.g., fresco [fɾeh.ko], ‘fresh’). Short-term travel and exposure to Media from /s/-weakening regions were not found to play a role in identification of aspirated-/s/. However, the regional background of reported social contacts (i.e., the social network) was a significant factor in how the regional variant was identified. Findings highlight the importance of live social interaction in language contact and change.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/borealis/article/view/3284dialect contactsociophonetic perception/s/-weakeningsocial networksMedia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren B. Schmidt
spellingShingle Lauren B. Schmidt
Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/
Borealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics
dialect contact
sociophonetic perception
/s/-weakening
social networks
Media
author_facet Lauren B. Schmidt
author_sort Lauren B. Schmidt
title Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/
title_short Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/
title_full Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/
title_fullStr Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/
title_full_unstemmed Not all forms of dialect contact are the same: Effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of Spanish aspirated-/s/
title_sort not all forms of dialect contact are the same: effects of regional media, travel, and social contacts on the perception of spanish aspirated-/s/
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Borealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics
issn 1893-3211
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Previous work has found that speakers who move to a new dialect region may come to adopt features of the second dialect. This study investigates whether other types of dialect exposure – those present without ever leaving one’s home dialectal region – similarly result in differences in language use. An identification task and a dialect contact questionnaire were administered to two Spanish-speaking dialect groups in Latin America to determine the effect of different types of dialect contact on the perceptual categorization of the regionally and socially variable feature of syllable-final /s/-aspiration (e.g., fresco [fɾeh.ko], ‘fresh’). Short-term travel and exposure to Media from /s/-weakening regions were not found to play a role in identification of aspirated-/s/. However, the regional background of reported social contacts (i.e., the social network) was a significant factor in how the regional variant was identified. Findings highlight the importance of live social interaction in language contact and change.
topic dialect contact
sociophonetic perception
/s/-weakening
social networks
Media
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/borealis/article/view/3284
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