Affiliation:
1. Concordia University
2. Western Kentucky University
3. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Abstract
Abstract
This study investigated listener-based assessment of the job performance of second language (L2) speakers employed
as customer service agents in outsourced foreign-based call centers, focusing on agents’ job performance as a function of the
comprehensibility, fluency, and accentedness of their speech. Using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk crowdsourcing platform, 116 native
English-speaking listeners evaluated two-minute recordings of actual customer service conversations featuring 18 Filipino agents,
assessing them for three global speech dimensions (comprehensibility, accentedness, and fluency) and three performance indicators,
including agents’ confidence, competence, and listeners’ interest in future communication with agents (a measure capturing
customer patronage). Comprehensibility and fluency consistently predicted how the listeners assessed the agents on all job
performance scales, and accentedness was additionally associated with how strongly the listeners wished to communicate with the
agents. Findings generally highlight the importance of fluent and comprehensible L2 speech in workplace settings.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Cited by
2 articles.
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