Evidence for the reproduction of social class in brief speech

Author:

Kraus Michael W.ORCID,Torrez Brittany,Park Jun Won,Ghayebi Fariba

Abstract

Economic inequality is at its highest point on record and is linked to poorer health and well-being across countries. The forces that perpetuate inequality continue to be studied, and here we examine how a person’s position within the economic hierarchy, their social class, is accurately perceived and reproduced by mundane patterns embedded in brief speech. Studies 1 through 4 examined the extent that people accurately perceive social class based on brief speech patterns. We find that brief speech spoken out of context is sufficient to allow respondents to discern the social class of speakers at levels above chance accuracy, that adherence to both digital and subjective standards for English is associated with higher perceived and actual social class of speakers, and that pronunciation cues in speech communicate social class over and above speech content. In study 5, we find that people with prior hiring experience use speech patterns in preinterview conversations to judge the fit, competence, starting salary, and signing bonus of prospective job candidates in ways that bias the process in favor of applicants of higher social class. Overall, this research provides evidence for the stratification of common speech and its role in both shaping perceiver judgments and perpetuating inequality during the briefest interactions.

Funder

Yale, School of Management

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference34 articles.

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2. R. V. Reeves , Dream Hoarders: How the American Upper Middle Class is Leaving Everyone Else in the Dust, Why that Is a Problem, and What to Do about It (Brookings Institute Press, Washington, DC, 2017).

3. Building a More Mobile America—One Income Quintile at a Time

4. Americans overestimate social class mobility

5. Income Mobility Breeds Tolerance for Income Inequality

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