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Social Priming: Exploring the Effects of Speaker Race and Ethnicity on Perception of Second Language Accents

Listeners use more than just acoustic information when processing speech. Social information, such as a speaker’s perceived race or ethnicity, can also affect the processing of the speech signal, in some cases facilitating perception (“social priming”). We aimed to replicate and extend this line of...

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Published in:Language and speech 2024-09, Vol.67 (3), p.821-845
Main Authors: McLaughlin, Drew J., Van Engen, Kristin J.
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description Listeners use more than just acoustic information when processing speech. Social information, such as a speaker’s perceived race or ethnicity, can also affect the processing of the speech signal, in some cases facilitating perception (“social priming”). We aimed to replicate and extend this line of inquiry, examining effects of multiple social primes (i.e., a Middle Eastern, White, or East Asian face, or a control silhouette image) on the perception of Mandarin Chinese-accented English and Arabic-accented English. By including uncommon priming combinations (e.g., a Middle Eastern prime for a Mandarin accent), we aimed to test the specificity of social primes: For example, can a Middle Eastern face facilitate perception of both Arabic-accented English and Mandarin-accented English? Contrary to our predictions, our results indicated no facilitative social priming effects for either of the second language (L2) accents. Results for our examination of specificity were mixed. Trends in the data indicated that the combination of an East Asian prime with Arabic accent resulted in lower accuracy as compared with a White prime, but the combination of a Middle Eastern prime with a Mandarin accent did not (and may have actually benefited listeners to some degree). We conclude that the specificity of priming effects may depend on listeners’ level of familiarity with a given accent and/or racial/ethnic group and that the mixed outcomes in the current work motivate further inquiries to determine whether social priming effects for L2-accented speech may be smaller than previously hypothesized and/or highly dependent on listener experience.
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source Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA); Sage Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Accentuation
Adolescent
Adult
Arabic language
Ethnic groups
Ethnicity
Ethnicity - psychology
Female
Humans
Language
Language usage
Listening
Male
Mandarin
Multilingualism
Non-native accent
Phonetics
Priming
Race
Racial Groups
Second Languages
Semitic Languages
Social learning
Social perception
Sociolinguistics
Speech Acoustics
Speech Perception
Young Adult
title Social Priming: Exploring the Effects of Speaker Race and Ethnicity on Perception of Second Language Accents
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