Accent accommodation in the job interview - Impact of interviewer accent and gender


Autoria(s): Willemyns, M.; Gallois, C.; Callan, V. J.; Pittam, J.
Data(s)

01/01/1997

Resumo

Using the framework of Communication Accommodation Theory, this study investigated the extent to which job applicants objectively and subjectively altered their accents to converge to or diverge from the speech style of the interviewer Forty-eight male and 48 female job applicants participated in two interviews for a casual research assistant position. In one interview, the interviewer had a broad Australian English accent, and in the other one, the interviewer had a cultivated accent. Applicants showed broader accents with broad-accented interviewers than with cultivated-accented interviewers. Applicants did not converge to the cultivated-accented interviewers, however and male job applicants were more likely than mere females to diverge from the cultivated-accented interviewers. There were also discrepancies between objectively rated changes to applicants' accents and their subjective judgments about the extent of accent accommodation.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57492

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Sage Publications

Palavras-Chave #Applied Linguistics #Psychology, Social #Behavior #Context #Model
Tipo

Journal Article