Study suggests "the bias is real but socially constructed, rather than grounded in how women actually sound."
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Upspeak, like many non-condescending quirks of speech, can be made condescending with application of sufficient quantities of sarcasm and scorn.Interesting interpretation... If anything, person A speaking to person B in sentences sounding like a question logically sounds like A craving B's validation/opinion on the subject. As far from condescending as linguistically possible.
Sure. So all upspeak would be condescending if all of it had sufficient quantities of sarcasm and scorn applied.Upspeak, like many non-condescending quirks of speech, can be made condescending with application of sufficient quantities of sarcasm and scorn.
Oddly, I don't give a shit about vocal fry but I find your post perfectly expresses my feelings about your post.Every time I hear someone use vocal fry I want to punch them in the face. It's not an endearing trait, it's a social flag to let everyone know that you're a f*#@ing moron.
It doesn't bother me. Uptalk does though. It doesn't bother me so much if I know the person and am familiar with them and their speech patterns. But when I am talking to someone I don't know that well, or at all, which is most of my working day, I just need to know when something that sounds like a question is actually a question.scortiusthecharioteer said:
Seconded.Protip: don’t visit Australia.
Palpatine does?Has anyone mentioned Yoda yet?
And does anyone dare say they hate Yoda?
Hmmmm... so fry vocal do we?Has anyone mentioned Yoda yet?
And does anyone dare say they hate Yoda?
I pleases me surprisingly immensely to realize I don't believe I've ever heard Sam Altman speak, a status I hope to retain for a lot longer.Not that I'd take anything Sam Altman says seriously anyway but it's 1000 times worse with his affected tech bro vocal fry.
A huge asshole.we should all keep in mind that Loudermilk is an asshole.
And the thing is you could actually do a good test of this hypothesis - for example you could take voices of both genders containing vocal fry - modulate them to the point that they are gender-indeterminate and have actors of either gender lip-sync to them.Studies like these should be taken with a huge grain of salt because they are nearly always the result of motivated reasoning - the author wants to prove a hypothesis and sets up experiments that are heavily weighted toward the desired outcome then p-hacks the hell out of any results that fit their biases.
Not picking on this study in particular - studies in the social sciences are terrible across the board.
And the thing is you could actually do a good test of this hypothesis - for example you could take voices of both genders containing vocal fry - modulate them to the point that they are gender-indeterminate and have actors of either gender lip-sync to them.
You could also take voices containing vocal fry - find which ones people rated annoying - then digitally remove/reduce the vocal fry while leaving the other aspects of the accent intact and see if people still rate it annoying.
There are lots of ways you could investigate this phenomenon that would be really interesting.
Again that's a testable hypothesis - you can see ihow people rate higher pitch fry vs lower pitch fry with no visual cues against how they rate them appearing to come from male or female actors.I think the problem here is that the annoyance factor of creaky voice is related to pitch.
This kind of tonal breakup appears in Darth Vader's voice. But I don't think people even notice it, much less associate it with annoying vocal fry, because it's much lower octave.
It's like fingernails on a chalkboard. Transpose that several octaves lower and most like it won't be so annoying.
IMO, this isn't gender bias, it the simple physical fact, that creaky higher pitched sounds are more irritating than creaky lower pitched ones.
There are also higher pitched male speakers, who will also produce more more irritating creaky voice, than James Earl Jones's creaky voice.