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SocioGroup at NWAV 48

PI Annette D’Onofrio and graduate students Jaime Benheim and Amelia Stecker attend NWAV 48 (New Ways of Analyzing Variation) on October 10-12, 2018 at the University of Oregon to present ongoing research projects. Check out the abstracts below, and don’t hesitate to reach out for information!

Experimental evidence for iconicity in variation

Iconicity is fundamental to sociolinguistic variation: intensification of a variant, whether through increased frequency of occurrence or phonetic intensification, intensifies its indexicality. Iconicity can also be involved in the choice of variant, playing on a variety of phonetic features such as hyperarticulation, fortition, lenition, acoustic frequency, and rhythm. Based on a series of social evaluation experiments, we provide evidence that hearers perceive a relation between acoustic frequency of a vowel and affective stance. We then move beyond the frequency code to show that consonant fortition — the coalescence of increased duration and amplitude of a stop burst — has a similar effect. Finally, we show that that rhythm — in particular, the presence of post-tonic lengthening in a word — can heighten that effect.

Gender, variant frequency, and social evaluations of speakers

Presented by Amelia Stecker

Listeners are sensitive to the frequency at which speakers produce “non-standard” variants in utterances, reflected in their social evaluations of those speakers. Previous work also illustrates that women’s voices face greater scrutiny than men’s voices. However, the ways that a speaker’s gender may modulate a listener’s sensitivity to the frequency of “non-standard” variants remains to be explored. Using the variable ING, a matched-guise task was conducted to compare listeners’ evaluations of male and female speakers producing varying proportions of a “non-standard” ‘-in’ variant, investigating whether listeners evaluate men and women differently for using ‘-in’ at the same rates of production. Findings show that speakers’ greater usage of the ‘-in’ variant faces more negative evaluations from listeners, but this trend did not differ between different speaker genders. Rather, differences in evaluations of individual speakers persist across and within gendered categories, bearing implications for notions of binary gender and single-speaker matched-guise paradigms.

Regional features and the Jewish ethnolinguistic repertoire in Chicago

Presented by Jaime Benheim

The Jewish American ethnolinguistic repertoire has been shown to include the use of New York City (NYC) regional features, even by speakers who live elsewhere. Less is known about how indexical links between NYC features and Jewish identity interface with the social meanings of regional features common to the communities outside of NYC in which Jewish speakers live. This study explores how Jewish Chicagoans’ vocalic systems integrate NYC- and Chicago-linked TRAP, LOT, and THOUGHT vowel productions. Evidence from production (wordlist) and perception (phoneme categorization) tasks reveal quantitative differences between Jewish and Catholic speakers’ LOT productions, and Orthodox vs. other Jewish listeners’ LOT perceptions. I argue that these differences are guided by LOT-fronting’s social meaning in Chicago more generally, and that the use of a given element from the ethnolinguistic repertoire can be influenced by that element’s pre-existing social meaning in a particular community.

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Posters presented at MidPhon

This October, graduate students Jaime Benheim and Amelia Stecker present their qualifying papers at MidPhon 23 (Mid-Continental Phonetics and Phonology Conference).

Jaime Benheim: Regional features and the Jewish ethnolinguistic repertoire in Chicago

Amelia Stecker: Gender, variant frequency, and social evaluations of speakers

Please reach out if you’d like a digital copy of the poster or any more information!

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SocioGroup at NWAV 47

PI Annette D’Onofrio and graduate students Amelia Stecker and Jaime Benheim present collaborative research projects at NWAV 47 (New Ways of Analyzing Variation) on October 18-21, 2018 at New York University. Check out the following abstracts, and feel free to reach to ask for a copy of the slides or for more information!

Contextualizing reversal: Sociohistorical dynamics and the Northern Cities Shift in a Chicago neighborhood

Despite Chicago’s status as the largest urban center in the Inland North, recent dynamics of the region’s Northern Cities Vowel Shift have remained relatively understudied in this city. This study examines the vowel systems of 40 speakers from one Chicago neighborhood area. Results reveal a reversal of the NCS in apparent time, paralleling findings in other NCS locales. However, while results indicate a robust community-wide trend, not all speakers engage with the shift in the same way. Through a qualitative examination of individual speakers’ vowel spaces, we find that shifting demographics and ideological concerns across the neighborhood’s history help explain which community members are likely to use NCS-shifted vowels at different points in apparent time. More broadly, we suggest that reversals of local sound changes are not always indicators of increased supralocal orientation or contact, but instead can be driven by shifts in what it means to index local identity.

The social meaning of stylistic variability: Sociophonetic (in)variance in presidential candidates’ campaign rallies

While work on sociolinguistic style has shown that speakers use packages of linguistic features to project personae, less commonly examined are the ways that an individual’s overall variability or consistency in the use of features across contexts can construct a socially-meaningful image. This study explores how two well-studied variables — ING and t-release — are recruited by three presidential candidates in campaign rallies. We quantify the variability a given candidate shows in deploying these features across eight campaign rallies in different locations. Differences emerged in the degree and nature of variance a given candidate exhibited in the use of these features across rally locales and topics discussed. We argue that the degree of linguistic variability a candidate exhibits across speech events can itself contribute to an ideological public image of flexibility or consistency, suggesting that the amount of variability a speaker exhibits across contexts is itself a dimension of sociolinguistic style.

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Hello!

We are SocioGroup at Northwestern University. We are a collection of linguists who explore questions about socially structured language variation.

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