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Journal of Language and Social Psychology, Vol. 24, No. 2, 182-206 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0261927X05275741

Effects of Talker Gender on Dialect Categorization

Cynthia G. Clopper

Indiana University

Brianna Conrey

Indiana University

David B. Pisoni

Indiana University

The identification of the gender of an unfamiliar talker is an easy and automatic process for naïve adult listeners. Sociolinguistic research has consistently revealed gender differences in the production of linguistic variables. Research on the perception of dialect variation, however, has been limited almost exclusively to male talkers. In the present study, naïve participants were asked to categorize unfamiliar talkers by dialect using sentence-length utterances under three presentation conditions: male talkers only, female talkers only, and a mixed gender condition. The results revealed no significant differences in categorization performance across the three presentation conditions. However, a clustering analysis of the listeners’ categorization errors revealed significant effects of talker gender on the underlying perceptual similarity spaces. The present findings suggest that naïve listeners are sensitive to gender differences in speech production and are able to use those differences to reliably categorize unfamiliar male and female talkers by dialect.

Key Words: dialect categorization • gender • regional dialect • speech perception • indexical properties


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