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Fasoli, F. & Maass, A. (2018). Voice and prejudice: the social costs of auditory gaydar. Atlantic Journal of Communication. 26 (2), 98-110
F. Fasoli and A. Maass, "Voice and prejudice: the social costs of auditory gaydar", in Atlantic Journal of Communication, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 98-110, 2018
@article{fasoli2018_1715023379203, author = "Fasoli, F. and Maass, A.", title = "Voice and prejudice: the social costs of auditory gaydar", journal = "Atlantic Journal of Communication", year = "2018", volume = "26", number = "2", doi = "10.1080/15456870.2018.1432617", pages = "98-110", url = "https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15456870.2018.1432617" }
TY - JOUR TI - Voice and prejudice: the social costs of auditory gaydar T2 - Atlantic Journal of Communication VL - 26 IS - 2 AU - Fasoli, F. AU - Maass, A. PY - 2018 SP - 98-110 SN - 1545-6870 DO - 10.1080/15456870.2018.1432617 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15456870.2018.1432617 AB - It is a widespread belief that individuals are able to detect other people’s sexual orientation from vocal information alone (auditory gaydar). We argue that auditory gaydar, although often inaccurate, leads to stereotyping, avoidance, and discrimination of gay/lesbian-sounding speakers. Much like “social vision,” these voice-based inferences are driven by two distinct processes—a direct feature-based path and an indirect path mediated by categorization. As a way to either underline their social identity or prevent stigmatization, gay/lesbian speakers tend to modulate their voice depending on the interlocutor and on their conversational goals. Together, our findings suggest that vocal information plays a subtle but powerful role in intra- and intergroup communication. ER -