Preregistration for 'Would you like to work with me? Workers’ evaluations of co-workability and competence for speakers with different accents' (doi:10.21979/N9/EXK0YT)

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Document Description

Citation

Title:

Preregistration for 'Would you like to work with me? Workers’ evaluations of co-workability and competence for speakers with different accents'

Identification Number:

doi:10.21979/N9/EXK0YT

Distributor:

DR-NTU (Data)

Date of Distribution:

2022-04-12

Version:

1

Bibliographic Citation:

Beatrice, Fidelia; Styles, Suzy J, 2022, "Preregistration for 'Would you like to work with me? Workers’ evaluations of co-workability and competence for speakers with different accents'", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/EXK0YT, DR-NTU (Data), V1

Study Description

Citation

Title:

Preregistration for 'Would you like to work with me? Workers’ evaluations of co-workability and competence for speakers with different accents'

Identification Number:

doi:10.21979/N9/EXK0YT

Authoring Entity:

Beatrice, Fidelia (Nanyang Technological University)

Styles, Suzy J (Nanyang Technological University)

Software used in Production:

Adobe PDF

Distributor:

DR-NTU (Data)

Access Authority:

Styles, Suzy J

Depositor:

Styles, Suzy J

Date of Deposit:

2022-01-19

Holdings Information:

https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/EXK0YT

Study Scope

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Social Sciences, accent bias, accentism, organizational psychology, speech perception, verbal guise task, employee evaluations

Abstract:

Over the past decade, there is an increasing spotlight on the importance of diversity in the workplace, especially in Singapore (DeLancey, 2013; Goswami & Rangaswamy, 2019; Joseph & Selvaraj, 2015). While diversity in the workplace has been known to have a positive effect as it increases creativity and innovation, it also has negative consequences such as increasing conflicts and reduced cohesiveness due to reasons such as communication (Bassett-Jones, 2005; Roberge & van Dick, 2010). This study will compare the effect of different status of accents (in terms of SES) on the listener’s desire of wanting to work with the speaker and the listener’s evaluation on the speaker’s ability and competence of their tasks, in terms of two constructs: perceived co-workability and perceived competence. Non-native accents have been known to affect ones’ perception of another’s competence (Nelson, Signorella & Botti, 2016). It is predicted that a general worker would prefer to work with someone which represents a higher education and white-collar productivity, especially in an office context. This study will compare workers' evaluations of pre-prepared scripts, read aloud by speakers with different Asian accents from higher and lower SES countries in the region.

Kind of Data:

Preregistration

Methodology and Processing

Sources Statement

Data Access

Other Study Description Materials

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

Beatrice&Styles2022_Preregistration.pdf

Text:

Preregistration documents

Notes:

application/pdf