Hearing What You Expect to Hear: The Interaction of Social and Cognitive Mechanisms Underlying Vocal Accommodation 公开
Sidaras, Sabrina Kim (2011)
Abstract
Abstract
Hearing What You Expect to Hear:
The Interaction of Social and Cognitive Mechanisms Underlying
Vocal
Accommodation
During spoken communication, individuals accommodate or change the
way they speak
based on characteristics of their conversational partner (Giles
& Powesland, 1975; Giles,
Scherer, & Taylor, 1979; Miller, 2005). Evidence suggests that
accommodation may be
due to a fundamental perceptual-production link (Fowler &
Galantucci, 2005; Pardo, 2006;
Pardo & Remez, 2006) that results in automatic vocal alignment
with an interlocutor.
However, social motivations have also been proposed as the primary
underlying
mechanism for accommodation (Giles, 1973; Giles & Coupland,
1991) because a variety of
social factors have been shown to significantly influence the
degree and type of vocal
accommodation that occurs. This dissertation was designed to
investigate how social
variables might interact with underlying perception-production
representations and
mechanisms in speech vocal accommodation. The set of experiments
sought to determine
a) if adult listeners could perceptually identify characteristics
of talker's voice such as
speech rate and age that were used as indices to measure vocal
accommodation and b) if
perceptual-motor representations are accessed continuously and
automatically during the
perception of vocal stimuli even in situations when social context
is unclear or ambiguous
and finally c) whether social expectations about characteristics of
a talker's voice, in this
case age, can affect accommodation in a minimally social context.
The findings from the
first experiment showed that listeners could perceptually identify
speech rate and age, and
vocal accommodation occurred even in a minimal social context, but
was not necessarily
affected by implicit social variables. The second experiment
investigated the extent to
which social variables influence the perceptual-motor processing of
speech when these
variables were highlighted. Participants were primed with social
stereotypes about age that
have been shown to be reflected in speaking style and then were
asked to shadow or repeat
words produced by an age ambiguous speaker. Illusory accommodation
did occur such
that participants accommodated towards an expected vocal behavior
rather than vocal
characteristics actually present in the acoustic signal. These
findings have implications for
how social mechanisms interact with perceptual-motor representation
and processing
during vocal accommodation.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
...................................................................................
1
a. Evidence for Perception Production
Links...............................................4
b. Perception Production Link Account
.....................................................15
c. Social Motivations Underlying Vocal
Accommodation............................... 19
d. Social Expectations and
Stereotypes....................................................24
e. The Current
Investigation...................................................................29
II. Experiment 1a
................................................................................
32
a. Method
..........................................................................................33
i. Participants
....................................................................................
.33
ii. Stimuli
...........................................................................................
34
iii.
Procedure.......................................................................................
35
b. Results and Discussion
......................................................................
36
i. Overall
Analyses..................................................................................36
ii. Analyses of Individual
Speakers.............................................................39
III. Experiment 1b
................................................................................
43
a. Method
............................................................................................45
i. Participants
.......................................................................................45
ii. Stimuli
.............................................................................................
45
iii. Procedure
........................................................................................45
b. Results and Discussion
........................................................................47
i. Duration
measurements.........................................................................47
ii. Response
latencies..............................................................................48
IV. Experiment
2.....................................................................................50
a.
Method..............................................................................................52
i. Participants
........................................................................................52
ii.
Stimuli...............................................................................................
53
iii. Procedure
..........................................................................................55
b. Results and Discussion
..........................................................................56
i. Duration
measurements...........................................................................56
ii. Response
latencies................................................................................57
VI. General Discussion
..............................................................................60
VII. References
.......................................................................................79
VIII.
Appendix.........................................................................................105
About this Dissertation
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