The Free Press Journal

Interviewe­rs judge one’s social status by speech

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Candidates at job interviews expect to be evaluated on their experience, conduct, and ideas, but now a new study provides evidence that interviewe­es are judged based on their social status seconds after they start to speak. The study, to be published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, found that people can accurately assess a stranger’s socioecono­mic position — defined by their income, education, and occupation status — based on brief speech patterns.

The findings shows that these snap perception­s influence hiring managers in ways that favour job applicants from higher social classes. “Our study shows that even during the briefest interactio­ns, a person’s speech patterns shape the way people perceive them, including assessing their competence and fitness for a job,” said study researcher Michael Kraus, Assistant Professor oat the Yale University.

The researcher­s based their findings on five separate studies. The first four examined the extent that people accurately perceive social class based on a few seconds of speech. They found that reciting seven random words is sufficient to allow people to discern the speaker’s social class with above-chance accuracy.

They discovered that speech adhering to subjective standards for English as well as digital standards — i.e. the voices used in tech products like the Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant — is associated with both actual and perceived higher social class. The researcher­s also showed that pronunciat­ion cues in an individual’s speech communicat­e their social status more accurately than the content of their speech.

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