Abstract

An unresolved issue in social perception concerns the effect of perceived ethnicity on speech processing. Bias-based accounts assume conscious misunderstanding of native speech in the case of a speaker classification as nonnative, resulting in negative ratings and poorer comprehension. In contrast, exemplar models of socially indexed speech perception suggest that such negative effects arise only when a contextual cue to the social identity is misleading, i.e. when ethnicity and speech clash with listeners’ expectations. To address these accounts, and to assess ethnicity effects across different age groups, three non-university populations (N = 172) were primed with photographs of Asian and white European women and asked to repeat and rate utterances spoken in three accents (Korean-accented German, a regional German accent, standard German), all embedded in background noise. In line with exemplar models, repetition accuracy increased when the expected and perceived speech matched, but the effect was limited to the foreign accent, and—at the group level—to teens and older adults. In contrast, Asian speakers received the most negative accent ratings across all accents, consistent with a bias-based view, but group distinctions again came into play here, with the effect most pronounced in older adults, and limited to standard German for teens. Importantly, the effects varied across ages, with younger adults showing no effects of ethnicity in either task. The findings suggest that theoretical contradictions are a consequence of methodological choices, which reflect distinct aspects of social information processing.

Highlights

  • The ways in which social attributions to a person’s appearance and voice influence language processing have been a topic of recent debates

  • The accuracy was overall higher in the foreign accent for Asian primes compared to white European primes, and it was somewhat higher in the regional and standard accent for white European primes compared to the Asian primes

  • This study examined the hypothesized causal link between perceived ethnic similarity and social expectations in speech evaluation and comprehension, by comparing results from an implicit and an explicit task across three speech contexts and three age groups

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Summary

Introduction

The ways in which social attributions to a person’s appearance and voice influence language processing have been a topic of recent debates. A large body of research has provided evidence that personal attributes of a speaker such as gender, ethnicity, regional or linguistic background have a profound effect on language attitudes, speech comprehension, and accent or competence evaluations (e.g., see [1], for a recent review, and [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13])

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