Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices

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 t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kubisz, Anna
Other Authors: Llamas, Carmen ; Watt, Dominic
Published: University of York 2016
Subjects:
401
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721893
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7218932019-01-29T03:27:41ZPerception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voicesKubisz, AnnaLlamas, Carmen ; Watt, Dominic2016This 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 rate the variant differently from the answer s/he gave in response to the same stimulus in Experiment 1. In Experiment 3, a new social factor, ethnicity, was introduced. The aim of this experiment was to investigate perceptions of speaker-indexical information when listeners were exposed to visual cues to the ethnicity of the supposed speaker. As Experiment 2, Experiment 3 tested whether speaker-indexical information could be shifted as a result of the manipulation. Furthermore, this research offers a multivariate investigation of perception of speaker-indexical information based on Tyneside English. Perceptions of the variants of the FACE, GOAT and NURSE vowels, T-to-R and variants of /p t k/ are tested. Finally, the findings for groups of listeners with high and lower exposure to Tyneside English are compared and contrasted.401University of Yorkhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721893http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/17875/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 401
spellingShingle 401
Kubisz, Anna
Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
description 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 rate the variant differently from the answer s/he gave in response to the same stimulus in Experiment 1. In Experiment 3, a new social factor, ethnicity, was introduced. The aim of this experiment was to investigate perceptions of speaker-indexical information when listeners were exposed to visual cues to the ethnicity of the supposed speaker. As Experiment 2, Experiment 3 tested whether speaker-indexical information could be shifted as a result of the manipulation. Furthermore, this research offers a multivariate investigation of perception of speaker-indexical information based on Tyneside English. Perceptions of the variants of the FACE, GOAT and NURSE vowels, T-to-R and variants of /p t k/ are tested. Finally, the findings for groups of listeners with high and lower exposure to Tyneside English are compared and contrasted.
author2 Llamas, Carmen ; Watt, Dominic
author_facet Llamas, Carmen ; Watt, Dominic
Kubisz, Anna
author Kubisz, Anna
author_sort Kubisz, Anna
title Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
title_short Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
title_full Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
title_fullStr Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
title_full_unstemmed Perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
title_sort perception of social-indexical information in gender-ambiguous voices
publisher University of York
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721893
work_keys_str_mv AT kubiszanna perceptionofsocialindexicalinformationingenderambiguousvoices
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