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Fasoli, F., Maass, A., Karniol, R., António, R. & Sulpizio, S. (2020). Voice changes meaning: the role of gay- versus straight-sounding voices in sentence interpretation. Journal of Language and Social Psychology. 39, 0261927X1988662
F. Fasoli et al., "Voice changes meaning: the role of gay- versus straight-sounding voices in sentence interpretation", in Journal of Language and Social Psychology, vol. 39, pp. 0261927X1988662, 2020
@article{fasoli2020_1732204961391, author = "Fasoli, F. and Maass, A. and Karniol, R. and António, R. and Sulpizio, S.", title = "Voice changes meaning: the role of gay- versus straight-sounding voices in sentence interpretation", journal = "Journal of Language and Social Psychology", year = "2020", volume = "39", number = "", doi = "10.1177/0261927X19886625", pages = "0261927X1988662", url = "https://journals.sagepub.com/" }
TY - JOUR TI - Voice changes meaning: the role of gay- versus straight-sounding voices in sentence interpretation T2 - Journal of Language and Social Psychology VL - 39 AU - Fasoli, F. AU - Maass, A. AU - Karniol, R. AU - António, R. AU - Sulpizio, S. PY - 2020 SP - 0261927X1988662 SN - 0261-927X DO - 10.1177/0261927X19886625 UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/ AB - Utterances reveal not only semantic information but also information about the speaker’s social category membership, including sexual orientation. In four studies (N = 345), we investigated how the meaning of what is being said changes as a function of the speaker’s voice. In Studies 1a/1b, gay- and straight-sounding voices uttered the same sentences. Listeners indicated the likelihood that the speaker was referring to one among two target objects varying along gender-stereotypical characteristics. Listeners envisaged a more “feminine” object when the sentence was uttered by a gay-sounding speaker, and a more “masculine” object when the speaker sounded heterosexual. In Studies 2a/2b, listeners were asked to disambiguate sentences that involved a stereotypical behavior and were open to different interpretations. Listeners disambiguated the sentences by interpreting the action in relation to sexual-orientation information conveyed by voice. Results show that the speaker’s voice changes the subjective meaning of sentences, aligning it to gender-stereotypical expectations. ER -