An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception
This study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may affect observers’ perceptions of a speaker’s performance. Using updated matched-guise techniques, we digitally manipulated the same recording of a conversation to alter the voice quality of “Speaker A”...
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2020-11-01
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2020-0033 |
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doaj-d662acd4d24748119d9d49590c214ba22021-10-02T19:05:04ZengDe GruyterOpen Linguistics2300-99692020-11-016156758310.1515/opli-2020-0033opli-2020-0033An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on PerceptionLindvall-Östling Mattias0Deutschmann Mats1Steinvall Anders2School of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences (HumES), Örebro University, Örebro, 701 82, Fakultetsgatan 1, Forumhuset, våning 2 och 3, SwedenSchool of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences (HumES), Örebro University, Örebro, 701 82, Fakultetsgatan 1, Forumhuset, våning 2 och 3, SwedenDepartment of Language Studies, Umeå University, Umeå, 907 36, Petrus Laestadius väg, SwedenThis study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may affect observers’ perceptions of a speaker’s performance. Using updated matched-guise techniques, we digitally manipulated the same recording of a conversation to alter the voice quality of “Speaker A” to sound “male” or “female.” Respondents’ perceptions of the conversational behaviour of Speaker A in the two guises were then measured with particular focus on floor apportionment, interruptions and signalling interest. We also measured respondents’ explicit stereotypical gender preconceptions of these aspects. Results showed that respondents perceived the male guise as having more floor apportionment and interrupting more than the female guise. Results also indicated that the respondents had explicit stereotypes that matched these patterns, i.e. that interrupting and taking space were deemed to be stereotypically male behaviour, while signalling interest was deemed to be a female feature. The study suggests that stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may skew perceptions of similar linguistic behaviour.https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2020-0033stereotypinginteractional stylesgenderperceptionmatched-guise |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Lindvall-Östling Mattias Deutschmann Mats Steinvall Anders |
spellingShingle |
Lindvall-Östling Mattias Deutschmann Mats Steinvall Anders An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception Open Linguistics stereotyping interactional styles gender perception matched-guise |
author_facet |
Lindvall-Östling Mattias Deutschmann Mats Steinvall Anders |
author_sort |
Lindvall-Östling Mattias |
title |
An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception |
title_short |
An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception |
title_full |
An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception |
title_fullStr |
An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Exploratory Study on Linguistic Gender Stereotypes and their Effects on Perception |
title_sort |
exploratory study on linguistic gender stereotypes and their effects on perception |
publisher |
De Gruyter |
series |
Open Linguistics |
issn |
2300-9969 |
publishDate |
2020-11-01 |
description |
This study explores how stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may affect observers’ perceptions of a speaker’s performance. Using updated matched-guise techniques, we digitally manipulated the same recording of a conversation to alter the voice quality of “Speaker A” to sound “male” or “female.” Respondents’ perceptions of the conversational behaviour of Speaker A in the two guises were then measured with particular focus on floor apportionment, interruptions and signalling interest. We also measured respondents’ explicit stereotypical gender preconceptions of these aspects. Results showed that respondents perceived the male guise as having more floor apportionment and interrupting more than the female guise. Results also indicated that the respondents had explicit stereotypes that matched these patterns, i.e. that interrupting and taking space were deemed to be stereotypically male behaviour, while signalling interest was deemed to be a female feature. The study suggests that stereotypical preconceptions about gender and conversational behaviour may skew perceptions of similar linguistic behaviour. |
topic |
stereotyping interactional styles gender perception matched-guise |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2020-0033 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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1716848227092791296 |