Assessing the Specificity and Accuracy of Accent Judgments by Lay Listeners

Date

2022-06-19

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

1756-6053

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Historically, there has been less research carried out on earwitness than eyewitness testimony. However, in some cases, earwitness evidence might play an important role in securing a conviction. This paper focuses on accent which is a central characteristic of voices in a forensic linguistic context. The paper focuses on two experiments (Experiment 1, n = 41; Experiment 2, n = 57) carried out with participants from a wide range of various locations around the United Kingdom to rate the accuracy and confidence in recognizing accents from voices from England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and Ireland as well as looking at specificity of answers given and how this varies for these regions. Our findings show that accuracy is variable and that participants are more likely to be accurate when using vaguer descriptions (such as “Scottish”) than being more specific. Furthermore, although participants lack the meta-linguistic ability to describe the features of accents, they are able to name particular words and pronunciations which helped them make their decision.

Description

open access article

Keywords

Accent, Identification, Forensic linguistics

Citation

Braber, N., et al. (2022) Assessing the Specificity and Accuracy of Accent Judgments by Lay Listeners’, Language and Speech

Rights

Research Institute