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Objective: Discrimination against nonnative speakers is widespread and largely socially acceptable. Nonnative speakers are evaluated negatively because accent is a sign that they belong to an outgroup and because understanding their speech requires unusual effort from listeners. The present research investigated intergroup bias, based on stronger support for hierarchical relations between groups (social dominance orientation [SDO]), as a predictor of hiring recommendations of nonnative speakers.
Method: In an online experiment using an adaptation of the thin-slices methodology, 65 U.S. adults (54% women; 80% White; M[age] = 35.91, range = 18–67) heard a recording of a job applicant speaking with an Asian (Mandarin Chinese) or a Latino (Spanish) accent. Participants indicated how likely they would be to recommend hiring the speaker, answered questions about the text, and indicated how difficult it was to understand the applicant.
Results: Independent of objective comprehension, participants high in SDO reported that it was more difficult to understand a Latino speaker than an Asian speaker. SDO predicted hiring recommendations of the speakers, but this relationship was mediated by the perception that nonnative speakers were difficult to understand. This effect was stronger for speakers from lower status groups (Latinos relative to Asians) and was not related to objective comprehension.
Conclusions: These findings suggest a cycle of prejudice toward nonnative speakers: Not only do perceptions of difficulty in understanding cause prejudice toward them, but also prejudice toward low-status groups can lead to perceived difficulty in understanding members of these groups.
Stress that spills over into one's intimate relationship (Repetti, 1989) can increase negative behavior between partners (Repetti, 1989; Schulz et al., 2004), which in turn can negatively affect relationship outcomes, such as satisfaction (Karney and Bradbury, 1995; Randall and Bodenmann, 2016). This negative stress spillover process may, however, be mitigated if couples help each other cope with the experienced stress (i.e., dyadic coping). Although theoretical assumptions, such as the systematic-transactional model of stress and dyadic coping (Bodenmann, 2005), suggest that the association between coping behavior and relationship satisfaction is determined by cultural influences (e.g., gender roles), findings from a recent meta-analysis shows that this association is stable across nations and gender (Falconier et al., 2015). Despite the significant findings, the samples used in the meta-analysis nearly exclusively relied on couples living in Western culture (Falconier et al., 2015), which leaves an unanswered question about how culture may affect the association between dyadic coping and relationship satisfaction. The goal of the current paper was to examine the cultural influence in dyadic coping processes based on 7973 married individuals across 35 nations.
The Social Perception of Heroes and Murderers: Effects of Gender-Inclusive Language in Media Reports
(2016)
The way media depict women and men can reinforce or diminish gender stereotyping. Which part does language play in this context? Are roles perceived as more gender-balanced when feminine role nouns are used in addition to masculine ones? Research on gender-inclusive language shows that the use of feminine-masculine word pairs tends to increase the visibility of women in various social roles. For example, when speakers of German were asked to name their favorite “heroine or hero in a novel,” they listed more female characters than when asked to name their favorite “hero in a novel.” The research reported in this article examines how the use of gender-inclusive language in news reports affects readers’ own usage of such forms as well as their mental representation of women and men in the respective roles. In the main experiment, German participants (N = 256) read short reports about heroes or murderers which contained either masculine generics or gender-inclusive forms (feminine-masculine word pairs). Gender-inclusive forms enhanced participants’ own usage of gender-inclusive language and this resulted in more gender-balanced mental representations of these roles. Reading about “heroines and heroes” made participants assume a higher percentage of women among persons performing heroic acts than reading about “heroes” only, but there was no such effect for murderers. A post-test suggested that this might be due to a higher accessibility of female exemplars in the category heroes than in the category murderers. Importantly, the influence of gender-inclusive language on the perceived percentage of women in a role was mediated by speakers’ own usage of inclusive forms. This suggests that people who encounter gender-inclusive forms and are given an opportunity to use them, use them more themselves and in turn have more gender-balanced mental representations of social roles.
Status und Gebrauch des Niederdeutschen 2016. Erste Ergebnisse einer repräsentativen Erhebung
(2016)
Wer versteht heute Plattdeutsch, und wer spricht es? Wer nutzt die plattdeutschen Medien- und Kulturangebote? Welche Vorstellungen verbinden die Menschen in Norddeutschland mit dem Niederdeutschen, und wie stehen sie zu ihrer Regionalsprache?
Diesen und weiteren Fragen widmet sich die vorliegende Broschüre mithilfe von repräsentativen Daten, die durch eine telefonische Befragung von insgesamt 1.632 Personen aus acht Bundesländern (Bremen, Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Niedersachsen, Schleswig-Holstein sowie Brandenburg, Nordrhein-Westfalen und Sachsen-Anhalt) gewonnen wurden.
Smiling individuals are usually perceived more favorably than non-smiling ones—they are judged as happier, more attractive, competent, and friendly. These seemingly clear and obvious consequences of smiling are assumed to be culturally universal, however most of the psychological research is carried out in WEIRD societies (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic) and the influence of culture on social perception of nonverbal behavior is still understudied. Here we show that a smiling individual may be judged as less intelligent than the same non-smiling individual in cultures low on the GLOBE’s uncertainty avoidance dimension. Furthermore, we show that corruption at the societal level may undermine the prosocial perception of smiling—in societies with high corruption indicators, trust toward smiling individuals is reduced. This research fosters understanding of the cultural framework surrounding nonverbal communication processes and reveals that in some cultures smiling may lead to negative attributions.
Die Preußische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin hat im Jahr 1906 auf Bitte der deutschen Regierung die Verantwortung für die Arbeiten zur Vollendung des Deutschen Wörterbuchs von Jacob Grimm und Wilhelm Grimm übernommen. Im Jahr 1929/30 hat sie die Berliner Arbeitsstelle gegründet. Nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg wurde dieses lexikographische Grundlagenwerk in den Jahrzehnten der Spaltung Deutschlands, aber in enger Gemeinschaft einer Berliner und einer Göttinger Arbeitsstelle zum Abschluss gebracht. Schon in den fünfziger Jahren entschlossen sich die Akademien in Berlin und Göttingen, „zunächst“ die völlige Neubearbeitung der ältesten Teile des Werks, die die Brüder Grimm zwischen 1852 und 1863 noch selbst erarbeitet hatten, vorzunehmen. Diese Neubearbeitung ist inzwischen nahezu abgeschlossen. Umso deutlicher zeigt sich aber nun, dass auch die übrigen Teile dringend der Neubearbeitung bedürfen. Das Jahrhundertwerk der Brüder Grimm, ihre wichtigste gemeinsame sprachwissenschaftliche Leistung, heute in der ganzen Welt täglich von Tausenden im Internet benutzt, Fundament der gesamten neueren deutschen Wortforschung, kann seine Aufgabe nur erfüllen, wenn es nicht als Museumsstück bewundert, sondern in gründlich erneuerter Form als aktuelles Auskunftsmittel fortgeführt wird. In dieser Situation war die Schließung der Berliner Arbeitsstelle im Dezember 2012 das falsche Signal.
Konnexion in argumentativen Texten. Gebrauchsunterschiede in Deutsch als L2 vs. Deutsch als L1
(2016)
Für die Kodierung interpropositionaler semantischer Relationen wie Additivität, Adversativität, Kausalität etc. steht im Deutschen wie in vielen anderen Sprachen ein reichhaltiges Inventar von Konnektoren unterschiedlicher syntaktischer Kategorien zur Verfügung. Einige semantische Relationen müssen jedoch nicht explizit kodiert werden, da sie auf der Basis übereinzelsprachlicher Erwartungen an „normale“ Sachverhaltszusammenhänge aus dem Kontext erschließbar sind. Ob diese Relationen dann auch von Schreibern ausbuchstabiert werden, ist einzelsprach-spezifisch unterschiedlich. Der Beitrag untersucht vor diesem Hintergrund die Kodierung interpropositionaler Relationen bei Lernern des Deutschen als Fremdsprache. Die Analyse eines Lernerkorpus mit Essays fortgeschrittener Deutschlerner aus Schweden, China und Weißrussland (KobaltDaF-Korpus) und eines muttersprachlichen Kontrollkorpus zeigt, dass Lerner von den Mustern der Muttersprachler quantitativ und qualitativ abweichen. Der Beitrag beschreibt diese Abweichungen und diskutiert mögliche Erklärungen.
The article investigates the ways in which organic-medical metaphors were used to set the boundary of discourse between the economy and politics. The successful establishment of organic-medical metaphors for the economy is mainly explained by their connectivity to different political views. Concepts such as ‘Wirtschaftsleben’ or perceptions of the economy as an ‘organism’ laid the foundation for diagnosing sick or healthy conditions. From the end of the 19th to beyond the mid-20th century typical statements illustrate that the use of such metaphors supported the naturalization and stabilization of the boundary-setting discourse, insofar as it seemed natural that the relation between the two spheres should be formulated in terms of health and disease. Within liberal economic discourse in particular, politics was on the one hand targeted as a potential cause for economic disease, while on the other, it was claimed that politics had the task of keeping economic forces healthy.
Unterschiede bei Dialektübersetzungen in Abhängigkeit von schriftlichen und mündlichen Stimuli
(2016)
When collecting linguistic data using translation tasks, stimuli can be presented in written or in oral form. In doing so, there is a possibility that a systematic source of error can occur that can be traced back to the selected survey method and which can influence the results of the translation tasks. This contribution investigates whether and to what extent both of the aforementioned survey methods result in divergent results when using translation tasks. For this investigation, 128 informants provided linguistic data; each informant had to translate 25 Wenker sentences from Standard German into either East Swabian, Lechrain or West Central Bavarian dialect, as the case may be. The results show two tendencies. First, written stimuli lead to a slightly higher number of dialectal translation in segmental variables. Second, when oral stimuli are used, syntactic and lexical variables are translated significantly more often in such a manner that they diverge from the template. The results can be explained in terms of varying cognitive processing operations and the constraints of human working memory. When collecting data in the future, these tendencies should be taken into account.