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The role of context in sociolinguistic perception

Cited 8 time in Web of Science Cited 8 time in Scopus
Authors

Hilton, Katherine; Jeong, Sunwoo

Issue Date
2019-05
Publisher
WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
Citation
Linguistics Vanguard, Vol.5 No.s1, p. 20180069
Abstract
Previous research demonstrates that listeners make social inferences about people based on how they speak, and that these inferences vary depending on the linguistic and social context. An open question is exactly how contextual enrichment (i.e. information about the speaker and speaking situation) comes to influence sociolinguistic perception. This paper addresses this question by analyzing data from 10 perception experiments investigating three different linguistic phenomena: number agreement in existential there constructions, intonation contours in declarative sentences, and overlapping speech in conversation. We observe an overall trend that increasing contextual enrichment obscures the effects of linguistic forms. In contextually impoverished stimuli, number non agreement and rising declaratives trigger perceptions that speakers are less educated and more polite, respectively, but show no effect on listener perceptions when embedded in more contextually rich stimuli. By contrast, overlapping speech shows robust effects on perceived inter-ruptiveness, even in contextually rich stimuli. Drawing on theories from social psychology and linguistic anthropology, we argue that if listeners are able to form sufficient impressions of speakers before encountering the target linguistic feature, they will not modify their impressions to incorporate the social meanings conveyed by the target linguistic feature, unless these social meanings are highly enregistered.
ISSN
2199-174X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/179710
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/lingvan-2018-0069
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