Ciência_Iscte
Publicações
Descrição Detalhada da Publicação
Can agentic messages help?: Linguistic strategies to counteract voice‐based sexual orientation discrimination
Título Revista
British Journal of Social Psychology
Ano (publicação definitiva)
2024
Língua
Inglês
País
Reino Unido
Mais Informação
Web of Science®
Scopus
Google Scholar
Esta publicação não está indexada no Google Scholar
Esta publicação não está indexada no Overton
Abstract/Resumo
Gay men who believe to sound ‘gay’ expect to be discriminated against because of their voices and gay-sounding men are discriminated against in the hiring process. We examined whether uttering an agency-based message decreased discrimination expectancy and enactment. In Study 1a (N = 256; gay and bisexual men) and Study 1b (N = 216; gay men), speakers uttered agentic (vs. neutral) messages. We assessed their self-perception as gay sounding, agency self-attribution and discrimination expectancy. Uttering agentic (vs. neutral) messages made the speakers self-perceive as more agentic and this decreased discrimination expectancy. Additionally, self-perception as gay sounding predicted discrimination expectancy. In Study 2 (N = 466), heterosexual participants listened to gay- and straight-sounding speakers uttering either neutral or agentic messages and rated them in terms of agency and employability. Gay-sounding speakers uttering agentic messages were less likely to be discriminated against than when uttering neutral messages. Results show the positive impact of linguistic strategies involving agentic messages to reduce discrimination expectancy and hiring biases.
Agradecimentos/Acknowledgements
--
Palavras-chave
Agency,Discriminaion,Sexual orientation,Voice
Classificação Fields of Science and Technology
- Psicologia - Ciências Sociais
English