Attention To People Like You

IF 0.6 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Biolinguistics Pub Date : 2020-06-08 DOI:10.5964/bioling.9171
Mísa Hejná, Lauren Ackerman, Joel C. Wallenberg
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Although the literature on language change has often replicated and discussed a pattern in which female speakers lead in changes that occur below the level of awareness, there is no consensus on why this pattern should arise. Interestingly, recent findings in endocrinology show that differences in prenatal testosterone exposure can impact learning patterns. In the light of these findings, we first present preliminary results consistent with the hypothesis that a biological factor, prenatal exposure to androgens, can have a small, continuous biasing effect on linguistic variation, namely the variable duration of pre-aspiration conditioned by voiceless obstruents in Tyneside English. Second, we propose an explanatory model in which the biological factor—prenatal testosterone exposure—creates subtle bias in how speakers learn linguistic variants and suggest that some reported sex effects are derivative. This model is compatible with the high tendency for females to lead in language change from below (Labov 1990: 206).
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尽管关于语言变化的文献经常复制和讨论一种模式,即女性发言人在意识水平以下的变化中起主导作用,但对于为什么会出现这种模式,人们还没有达成共识。有趣的是,最近内分泌学的研究结果表明,产前睾酮暴露的差异会影响学习模式。根据这些发现,我们首先提出了与以下假设一致的初步结果,即产前暴露于雄激素的生物学因素可能对语言变异产生小的、持续的偏见影响,即泰恩赛德英语中无声障碍物条件下的吸气前持续时间可变。其次,我们提出了一个解释模型,其中生物学因素——产前睾酮暴露——在说话者学习语言变体的方式上产生了微妙的偏见,并表明一些报道的性影响是衍生的。这种模式与女性主导语言变化的高趋势相一致(Labov 1990:206)。
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来源期刊
Biolinguistics
Biolinguistics LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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