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The relationship between implicit associations and the social priming of nonnative speech ...
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Sequence effects and speech perception: Cognitive load for speaker-switching within and across accents ...
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The relationship between implicit racial bias and audiovisual integration of nonnative-accented speech ...
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The effect of race on the perception of nonnative accent: A replication of McGowan (2015) ...
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The relationship between implicit associations and the social priming of speech ...
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The effect of social primes on multi-talker perceptual adaptation ...
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Abstract:
Social information, such as a speaker’s race, has been shown to affect the success of speech perception. For example, Canadian listeners show better understanding of standard Canadian-accented English when primed with a White face than when primed with a Chinese face (Babel & Russell, 2015). The converse of this is also true, such that listeners primed with an East Asian face while listening to Mandarin Chinese-accented English show better understanding than listeners primed with a White face (McGowan, 2015). Together, this research indicates that social information may implicitly affect the perception of speech – in some cases improving the listener’s ability to understand speech, and in other cases hindering it. In this experiment, we aim to test whether social primes (i.e., race information about a speaker) can affect perceptual adaptation in a multi-talker setting. Specifically, we will examine changes in transcription accuracy when listening to three female Cantonese-accented speakers of English. ...
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Keyword:
accent; accent accommodation; accent perception; Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics; Cognition and Perception; Cognitive Psychology; FOS Languages and literature; FOS Psychology; Linguistics; perceptual adaptation; Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics; Psychology; race; race and language; raciolinguistics; Social and Behavioral Sciences; social priming; sociolinguistics; speech perception; talker-independent adaptation
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URL: https://osf.io/dr4m5/ https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/dr4m5
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Revisiting reduced audiovisual benefit for nonnative-accented speech ...
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Individual Variation in the Perception of Speech in Multiple Types of Adverse Listening Conditions
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