Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions

Do men and women speak differently? Language differences between men and women have always been a popular topic across various cultures and languages. Singapore English is no exception but research on gendered interactions have received little attention in Singapore. This thesis utilises conversatio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Koh, Jia Jun
Other Authors: Ng Bee Chin
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171733
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-171733
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1717332023-12-01T01:52:37Z Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions Koh, Jia Jun Ng Bee Chin School of Humanities MBCNg@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Communication::Communication theories and models Humanities::Linguistics::Colloquial language Do men and women speak differently? Language differences between men and women have always been a popular topic across various cultures and languages. Singapore English is no exception but research on gendered interactions have received little attention in Singapore. This thesis utilises conversations extracted from Singapore’s National Speech Corpus (NSC), a three-part corpus of speech data produced by the Infocommunications and Media Development Authority of Singapore (IMDA), consisting of read scripts, local words, and dyadic interactions. These dyadic interactions will be viewed through the lens of Communication Accommodation Theory (CAT) and the Difference and Dynamic approaches in language and gender to examine how certain linguistic features that mark social distance are influenced by speaker gender and the dyad condition — i.e., same-gender dyads or mixed-gender dyads. The three linguistic features explored in this thesis are the use of backchannels, filled pauses, and Singlish particles, with an additional supplementary measure that employs the use of Language Style Matching (LSM) scores. Using linear mixed effects modelling, results show that speaker gender is a significant predictor for all three variables, with women using more backchannels than men, and men using more filled pauses and Singlish particles than women. For accommodation patterns from same-gender dyads to mixed-gender dyads, the use of backchannels diverged while the use of filled pauses and Singlish particles converged. Filled pauses and especially Singlish particles are shown to be good indicators of low social distance between interlocutors and reflect strategies used by both men and women to accommodate to each other. Results for LSM scores revealed that same-gender female dyads match more in linguistic style than same-gender male dyads, indicating the difference in communication styles between women and men — with women’s communication style being more cooperative than men’s. This study is the first quantitative analysis of linguistics features drawn from a large corpus of natural speech focusing on gender differences within the framework of CAT in Singapore. The findings give us a snapshot of how feminine and masculine speech styles are indexed in the Singapore context, and the usefulness of comparing same-gender and mixed gender dyads to provide an interactional dimension to the analysis. Master of Arts 2023-11-06T07:36:52Z 2023-11-06T07:36:52Z 2023 Thesis-Master by Research Koh, J. J. (2023). Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171733 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171733 10.32657/10356/171733 en MOE2019-T2-1-084 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication::Communication theories and models
Humanities::Linguistics::Colloquial language
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication::Communication theories and models
Humanities::Linguistics::Colloquial language
Koh, Jia Jun
Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
description Do men and women speak differently? Language differences between men and women have always been a popular topic across various cultures and languages. Singapore English is no exception but research on gendered interactions have received little attention in Singapore. This thesis utilises conversations extracted from Singapore’s National Speech Corpus (NSC), a three-part corpus of speech data produced by the Infocommunications and Media Development Authority of Singapore (IMDA), consisting of read scripts, local words, and dyadic interactions. These dyadic interactions will be viewed through the lens of Communication Accommodation Theory (CAT) and the Difference and Dynamic approaches in language and gender to examine how certain linguistic features that mark social distance are influenced by speaker gender and the dyad condition — i.e., same-gender dyads or mixed-gender dyads. The three linguistic features explored in this thesis are the use of backchannels, filled pauses, and Singlish particles, with an additional supplementary measure that employs the use of Language Style Matching (LSM) scores. Using linear mixed effects modelling, results show that speaker gender is a significant predictor for all three variables, with women using more backchannels than men, and men using more filled pauses and Singlish particles than women. For accommodation patterns from same-gender dyads to mixed-gender dyads, the use of backchannels diverged while the use of filled pauses and Singlish particles converged. Filled pauses and especially Singlish particles are shown to be good indicators of low social distance between interlocutors and reflect strategies used by both men and women to accommodate to each other. Results for LSM scores revealed that same-gender female dyads match more in linguistic style than same-gender male dyads, indicating the difference in communication styles between women and men — with women’s communication style being more cooperative than men’s. This study is the first quantitative analysis of linguistics features drawn from a large corpus of natural speech focusing on gender differences within the framework of CAT in Singapore. The findings give us a snapshot of how feminine and masculine speech styles are indexed in the Singapore context, and the usefulness of comparing same-gender and mixed gender dyads to provide an interactional dimension to the analysis.
author2 Ng Bee Chin
author_facet Ng Bee Chin
Koh, Jia Jun
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Koh, Jia Jun
author_sort Koh, Jia Jun
title Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
title_short Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
title_full Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
title_fullStr Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
title_full_unstemmed Language accommodation and gender in Singapore English: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
title_sort language accommodation and gender in singapore english: a corpus-based approach looking at same-gender and mixed-gender interactions
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/171733
_version_ 1784855572952121344