| Literature DB >> 30532156 |
Sven Kachel1,2, André Radtke1,2, Verena G Skuk1,3,4, Romi Zäske1,3,4, Adrian P Simpson1,5, Melanie C Steffens2.
Abstract
While the perception of sexual orientation in voices often relies on stereotypes, it is unclear whether speech stereotypes and accurate perceptions of sexual orientation are each based on acoustic cues common to speakers of a given group. We ask if the stereotypical belief, that members of the same sexual orientation group share similar acoustic patterns, is accurate to some degree. To address this issue, we are the first to use a novel voice morphing technique to create voice averages from voices that represent extremes of a given sexual orientation group either in terms of actual or perceived sexual orientation. Importantly, averaging preserves only those acoustic cues shared by the original speakers. 144 German listeners judged the sexual orientation of twelve natural-sounding sentence stimuli, each representing an average of five original utterances. Half of the averages were based on targets' self-ratings of sexual orientation: On a 7-point Kinsey-like scale, we selected targets who were most typical for a certain sexual orientation group according to their self-identifications. The other half were based on extreme ratings by others (i.e., on speech-related sexual-orientation stereotypes). Listeners judged sexual orientation from the voice averages with above-chance accuracy suggesting 1) that the perception of actual and stereotypical sexual orientation, respectively, are based on acoustic cues shared by speakers of the same group, and 2) that the stereotypical belief that members of the same sexual orientation group share similar acoustic patterns is accurate to some degree. Mean fundamental frequency and other common acoustic parameters showed systematic variation depending on speaker gender and sexual orientation. Effects of sexual orientation were more pronounced for stereotypical voice averages than for those based on speakers' self-ratings, suggesting that sexual-orientation stereotypes exaggerate even those differences present in the most salient groups of speakers. Implications of our findings for stereotyping and discrimination are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30532156 PMCID: PMC6287851 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208686
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Voice averages (VA) originated from individual voices (1–60) of 5 female and male speakers who were lesbian/gay, bisexual, and straight based on self-ratings or ratings by others.
Overview of sexual orientation ratings for all voice averages.
| 5-voice female averages, based on… | 5-voice male averages, based on… | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| …self-ratings | …ratings by others | …self-ratings | …ratings by others | |||||||||
| L | B | S | L | B | S | G | B | S | G | B | S | |
| Age | 23.20 | 23.00 | 23.00 | 23.20 | 25.00 | 23.20 | 25.80 | 24.60 | 25.60 | 24.80 | 24.20 | 23.40 |
| Kinsey-like scale | 1.00 | 4.00 | 7.00 | 2.80 | 5.20 | 4.80 | 1.00 | 4.40 | 7.00 | 2.60 | 2.60 | 4.80 |
| Sexual Orientation Index | -5.25 | .00 | 4.40 | -2.30 | 2.25 | .85 | 5.65 | -.10 | -5.75 | 3.45 | 2.45 | -1.75 |
| Perceivedstraightness | .80 | .88 | .62 | .80 | .90 | .65 | .70 | .66 | .31 | .66 | .87 | |
| Meanranks | 17.50 | 26.83 | 3.40 | 15.20 | 31.50 | 14.00 | 16.5 | 19.83 | 3.00 | 13.75 | 32.00 | |
| Mean rank differences | 3.67 | -.33 | -.40 | -1.20 | -.60 | 6.00 | 13.00 | .33 | .00 | .60 | -1.60 | |
Abbreviations: B = bisexual wo/men, G = gay men, L = lesbians, S = straight wo/men, SD = standard deviation, Kinsey-like scale ranged from 1 –“exclusively lesbian/gay” via 4 –“equally lesbian/gay and straight” to 7 –“exclusively straight”. Sexual Orientation Index ranged from -7 –“sexually oriented towards women only” via 0 –“sexually oriented towards women and men” to 7 –“sexually oriented towards men only”. Perceived straightness indicates mean relative numbers of perceptions as straight in both pre-ratings ranging from 0 –“judged as straight by 0%” to 1 –“judged as straight by 100%”. Mean ranks ranged from 3 –“voices were on average located at the lesbian/gay end of the perceived sexual orientation distribution” via 18.50 –“voices were on average located at the bisexual area of the perceived sexual orientation distribution” to 34 –“voices were on average located at the straight end of the perceived sexual orientation distribution”. Mean rank differences close to 0 indicate that voices were rated as very similar on average in both pre-studies. Note that we did not depict standard deviations for self-ratings and ratings by others because of small sample sizes (n = 5 for each voice average).
an = 5.
bn for calculating mean ranks and mean rank differences ranged from 0 for women who rated themselves as bisexual to 4 for men who rated themselves as gay, because not every speaker who was selected for voice averaging based on self-ratings was selected for ratings by others.
Fig 2TANDEM STRAIGHT view including time (parallel lines) and frequency anchors (dots on the lines) of the chosen sentence
Overview on acoustic parameters for all voice averages (in Hz).
| 5-voice female averages, based on… | 5-voice male averages, based on… | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| …self-ratings | …ratings by others | …self-ratings | …ratings by others | |||||||||
| L | B | S | L | B | S | G | B | S | G | B | S | |
| f0 mean | 209 | 190 | 198 | 176b | 171 | 206 | 122b | 113 | 106 | 117b | 109 | 106 |
| f0 | 10 | 10 | 19 | 20b | 17 | 21 | 15b | 11 | 10 | 12a | 10 | 17 |
| f0 2.5th percentile | 191 | 175 | 168 | 134b | 146 | 174 | 99b | 95 | 85 | 100b | 93 | 81 |
| f0 97.5th percentile | 235 | 210 | 231 | 203b | 203 | 239 | 144b | 134 | 126 | 137b | 125 | 135 |
| F1 mean | 624 | 612 | 582 | 562b | 600 | 625 | 520a | 559 | 545 | 526b | 545 | 500 |
| F2 mean | 1403 | 1436 | 1422 | 1363b | 1408 | 1408 | 1306b | 1238 | 1173 | 1292b | 1269 | 1183 |
| Vowel space dispersion | 359 | 410 | 387 | 355b | 405 | 360 | 371b | 394 | 368 | 345b | 398 | 328 |
Abbreviations: B = bisexual wo/men, f0 = fundamental frequency, F1 = first formant frequency, F2 = second formant frequency, G = gay men, L = lesbians, S = straight wo/men, SD = standard deviation.
aAcoustic differences between lesbian/gay and straight speakers that were in line with speech stereotypes about sexual orientation groups drawn from lay gender inversion theory.
bAcoustic differences between lesbian/gay and straight speakers that were NOT in line with speech stereotypes about sexual orientation groups drawn from lay gender inversion theory.
Fig 3a. First-order interaction effects of speaker sexual orientation x rating basis in perceived sexual orientation of voice averages. b. First-order interaction effects of (b) speaker sexual orientation x speaker gender in perceived sexual orientation of voice averages. c. First-order interaction effects of speaker gender x rating basis in perceived sexual orientation of voice averages.