Judgments of American English Male Talkers Who Are Perceived to Sound Gay or Heterosexual
- UNCP Author/Contributor (non-UNCP co-authors, if there are any, appear on document)
- Dr. Erik Tracy, Assitant Professor (Creator)
- Institution
- The University of North Carolina at Pembroke (UNCP )
- Web Site: http://www.uncp.edu/academics/library
Abstract: Prior research (Campbell-Kibler, 2011; Gaudio, 1994) discovered that some personality traits (e.g., emotional and intelligent) are associated with gay male talkers and other traits (e.g., masculine and reserved) are associated with heterosexual male talkers. The present investigation examined additional traits listeners associated with four groups of talkers: gay talkers who were perceived as sounding gay, gay talkers who were perceived as sounding heterosexual, heterosexual talkers who were perceived as sounding gay, and heterosexual talkers who were perceived as sounding heterosexual (Tracy, Bainter, & Satariano, 2015). After hearing a spoken utterance, listeners rated talkers along eight traits: bored, confident, intelligent, mad, old, outgoing, sad, and stuck-up (Tracy & Charlton, 2016). The results demonstrated that the gay and heterosexual talkers who were perceived as sounding gay were rated as being significantly more confident, mad, stuck-up, and outgoing; the gay and heterosexual talkers who were perceived as sounding heterosexual were rated as being significantly more bored, sad, and older. There were no significant rating differences for intelligence. It was concluded that a talker’s perceived sexual orientation, rather than their self-identified sexual orientation, influenced which personality traits listeners associated with them.
Judgments of American English Male Talkers Who Are Perceived to Sound Gay or Heterosexual
PDF (Portable Document Format)
13119 KB
Created on 9/18/2017
Views: 651
Additional Information
- Publication
- UNCP Research and Creativity Showcase
- Language: English
- Date: 2017
- Keywords
- American English Male Talkers, Indexical Characteristics of Speech, Perceived Sounds, Sexual Orientations, Gay and Heterosexual Male Speech, Judgments, Gays, Heterosexuals, Faculty Research, Poster Presentations, University of North Carolina at Pembroke