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The Effect of Perceived Regional Accents on Individual Economic Behavior: A Lab Experiment on Linguistic Performance, Cognitive Ratings and Economic Decisions

The Effect of Perceived Regional Accents on Individual Economic Behavior: A Lab Experiment on Linguistic Performance, Cognitive Ratings and Economic Decisions
The Effect of Perceived Regional Accents on Individual Economic Behavior: A Lab Experiment on Linguistic Performance, Cognitive Ratings and Economic Decisions
Does it matter if you speak with a regional accent? Speaking immediately reveals something of one’s own social and cultural identity, be it consciously or unconsciously. Perceiving accents involves not only reconstructing such imprints but also augmenting them with particular attitudes and stereotypes. Even though we know much about attitudes and stereotypes that are transmitted by, e.g. skin color, names or physical attractiveness, we do not yet have satisfactory answers how accent perception affects human behavior. How do people act in economically relevant contexts when they are confronted with regional accents? This paper reports a laboratory experiment where we address this question. Participants in our experiment conduct cognitive tests where they can choose to either cooperate or compete with a randomly matched male opponent identified only via his rendering of a standardized text in either a regional accent or standard accent. We find a strong connection between the linguistic performance and the cognitive rating of the opponent. When matched with an opponent who speaks the accent of the participant’s home region—the in-group opponent –, individuals tend to cooperate significantly more often. By contrast, they are more likely to compete when matched with an accent speaker from outside their home region, the out-group opponent. Our findings demonstrate, firstly, that the perception of an out-group accent leads not only to social discrimination but also influences economic decisions. Secondly, they suggest that this economic behavior is not necessarily attributable to the perception of a regional accent per se, but rather to the social rating of linguistic distance and the in-group/out-group perception it evokes.
1932-6203
Heblich, Stephan
d65ae28d-c6db-495d-a218-de61568fde78
Lameli, Alfred
cae9d87b-a751-49b2-9b7c-59ce62e4360c
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Heblich, Stephan
d65ae28d-c6db-495d-a218-de61568fde78
Lameli, Alfred
cae9d87b-a751-49b2-9b7c-59ce62e4360c
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1

Heblich, Stephan, Lameli, Alfred and Riener, Gerhard (2015) The Effect of Perceived Regional Accents on Individual Economic Behavior: A Lab Experiment on Linguistic Performance, Cognitive Ratings and Economic Decisions. PLoS ONE, 10 (2), [e0113475]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0113475).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Does it matter if you speak with a regional accent? Speaking immediately reveals something of one’s own social and cultural identity, be it consciously or unconsciously. Perceiving accents involves not only reconstructing such imprints but also augmenting them with particular attitudes and stereotypes. Even though we know much about attitudes and stereotypes that are transmitted by, e.g. skin color, names or physical attractiveness, we do not yet have satisfactory answers how accent perception affects human behavior. How do people act in economically relevant contexts when they are confronted with regional accents? This paper reports a laboratory experiment where we address this question. Participants in our experiment conduct cognitive tests where they can choose to either cooperate or compete with a randomly matched male opponent identified only via his rendering of a standardized text in either a regional accent or standard accent. We find a strong connection between the linguistic performance and the cognitive rating of the opponent. When matched with an opponent who speaks the accent of the participant’s home region—the in-group opponent –, individuals tend to cooperate significantly more often. By contrast, they are more likely to compete when matched with an accent speaker from outside their home region, the out-group opponent. Our findings demonstrate, firstly, that the perception of an out-group accent leads not only to social discrimination but also influences economic decisions. Secondly, they suggest that this economic behavior is not necessarily attributable to the perception of a regional accent per se, but rather to the social rating of linguistic distance and the in-group/out-group perception it evokes.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 24 October 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 February 2015
Published date: 1 December 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479087
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479087
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: ffedf486-2272-4eb3-b3ac-b5564e5ba64c
ORCID for Gerhard Riener: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1056-2034

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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2023 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Stephan Heblich
Author: Alfred Lameli
Author: Gerhard Riener ORCID iD

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