Recognizing Uptalk: False Memory and Metalinguistic Commentary for a Sociolinguistic Feature

IF 1.5 1区 文学 Q2 LINGUISTICS
Amelia Stecker, Annette D'Onofrio
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Relatively little work has examined how metalinguistic awareness about sociolinguistic features can impact processes of sociolinguistic memory, which are crucial to the formation of cognitive sociolinguistic representations. This article explores how metalinguistic commentary can bias listeners’ memory of a linguistic feature, uptalk, that is ideologically linked with women in popular meta-discourses. A novel contour-recognition paradigm tests how listeners mis-remember uptalk depending on the perceived gender of the speaker. We provided participants with top-down metalinguistic information about which gendered speakers were most likely to use uptalk to induce metalinguistic bias toward associations between rising contours and speakers of particular genders. Results show a speaker's perceived gender, as well as metalinguistic information provided to a listener, can bias recognition of prosodic contours, but only when this information reinforces listeners’ pre-existing beliefs. Overall, we suggest that linguistic ideologies can shape how listeners interpret and even remember both metalinguistic statements and sociolinguistic variants.

Abstract Image

向上话语的识别:社会语言学特征的错误记忆和元语言评论
关于社会语言特征的金属语言意识如何影响社会语言记忆过程的研究相对较少,而社会语言记忆过程对于认知社会语言表征的形成至关重要。本文探讨了金属语言学评论如何影响听者对流行元话语中与女性意识形态相关的语言特点--上语--的记忆。一个新颖的轮廓识别范式测试了听者是如何根据说话者的性别错误记忆上行语的。我们向参与者提供了自上而下的金属语言信息,让他们了解哪些性别的说话者最有可能使用高谈阔论,从而诱发金属语言偏差,将上升的轮廓与特定性别的说话者联系起来。结果表明,说话者的性别认知以及提供给听者的金属语言学信息,会对前音轮廓的识别产生偏差,但只有当这些信息强化了听者已有的信念时才会产生偏差。总之,我们认为语言意识形态会影响听者对金属语言陈述和社会语言变体的解释甚至记忆。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
10.50%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: Journal of Sociolinguistics promotes sociolinguistics as a thoroughly linguistic and thoroughly social-scientific endeavour. The journal is concerned with language in all its dimensions, macro and micro, as formal features or abstract discourses, as situated talk or written text. Data in published articles represent a wide range of languages, regions and situations - from Alune to Xhosa, from Cameroun to Canada, from bulletin boards to dating ads.
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