Beyond She and He: A Framework for Studying the Cognitive, Psychological and Social Effects of Gender-Neutral Pronouns [0.03%]
超越她和他:研究性别中性代词的认知、心理和社会影响的框架
Tiziana Jäggi,Pascal M Gygax,Sofie Decock et al.
Tiziana Jäggi et al.
In recent years, gender-neutral pronouns have emerged in different languages. We review current research on their emergence and offer an interdisciplinary framework for studying and understanding gender-neutral pronouns. Our framework is ai...
A Scoping Review of Published Literature on the Linguistic Representation of Indigenous Peoples [0.03%]
关于原著居民的语言表达的文献综述
Jessica Chan,Katherine A Collins,Rebecka Lee et al.
Jessica Chan et al.
Published research involving Indigenous Peoples is largely deficit-based, which can perpetuate stereotypes against Indigenous Peoples. We conducted a scoping review to understand what is currently known about the linguistic representation o...
Automating the Detection of Linguistic Intergroup Bias Through Computerized Language Analysis [0.03%]
基于计算机语言分析的自动化语言群体偏见检测方法研究
Katherine A Collins,Ryan L Boyd
Katherine A Collins
Linguistic bias is the differential use of abstraction, or other linguistic mechanisms, for the same behavior by members of different groups. Abstraction is defined by the Linguistic Category Model (LCM), which defines a continuum of words ...
Couples' We-Ness and Separateness During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Lockdown: A Longitudinal Perspective [0.03%]
新冠肺炎疫情期间夫妻关系中的“我们”与独立性——纵向视角分析
Sarah Galdiolo,Anthony Mauroy,Lesley Liliane Verhofstadt
Sarah Galdiolo
This 5-wave longitudinal study aimed to monitor the feeling of we-ness and separateness over one year of the COVID-19 pandemic by examining partners' natural pronoun usage when reporting couple interactions. Compared to the start of the pan...
Mapping Linguistic Shifts During Psychological Coping With the COVID-19 Pandemic [0.03%]
COVID-19大流行期间的心理应对过程中的语言变化地图集
Xun Zhu
Xun Zhu
How does language change reveal the psychological trajectories of people coping with a COVID-19 infection? This study examined writings on social media over 12 weeks from people who self-reported having tested positive for COVID-19. People ...
Margaret J Pitts
Margaret J Pitts
This epilogue to the Special Issue on Language Challenges in the 21st Century offers commentary on the current state of social scientific inquiry in the field of language and social psychology. Inspired by the seven articles that make up th...
Quebec-based Parents' Attitudes Towards Childhood Multilingualism: Evaluative Dimensions and Potential Predictors [0.03%]
魁北克地区家长对儿童多元语言态度的评价维度及其潜在影响因素
Ruth Kircher,Erin Quirk,Melanie Brouillard et al.
Ruth Kircher et al.
This is the first large-scale, quantitative study of the evaluative dimensions and potential predictors of Quebec-based parents' attitudes towards childhood multilingualism. Such attitudes are assumed to constitute a determinant of parental...
Natural Language Analysis and the Psychology of Verbal Behavior: The Past, Present, and Future States of the Field [0.03%]
自然语言分析与言语行为的心理学:该领域的过去、现在和未来状态
Ryan L Boyd,H Andrew Schwartz
Ryan L Boyd
Throughout history, scholars and laypeople alike have believed that our words contain subtle clues about what we are like as people, psychologically speaking. However, the ways in which language has been used to infer psychological processe...
The Relative Power of Negativity: The Influence of Language Intensity on Perceived Strength [0.03%]
负面信息的力量:语言强度对感知说服力的影响研究
Christine Liebrecht,Lettica Hustinx,Margot van Mulken
Christine Liebrecht
Negative utterances and words have been found to be stronger than positive utterances and words, but what happens if positive and negative utterances are intensified? Two online experiments were carried out in which participants judged the ...
How Do Friends and Strangers Play the Game Taboo? A Study of Accuracy, Efficiency, Motivation, and the Use of Shared Knowledge [0.03%]
朋友与陌生人如何玩禁忌游戏?准确性、效率、动机及共享知识运用的考察
Monique M H Pollmann,Emiel J Krahmer
Monique M H Pollmann
According to common belief, friends communicate more accurately and efficiently than strangers, because they can use uniquely shared knowledge and common knowledge to explain things to each other, while strangers are restricted to common kn...