Get the latest tech news

Brits still associate working-class accents with criminals – study warns of bias


People who speak with accents perceived as ‘working-class’ including those from Liverpool, Newcastle, Bradford and London risk being stereotyped as more likely

The researchers, from Cambridge and Nottingham Trent University, asked 180 participants (~50:50 gender split) from across the UK to listen to recordings of ten regionally-accented male voices: Belfast, Birmingham, Bradford, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, Liverpool, London, Newcastle and Standard Southern British English (SSBE), also referred to as RP. Participants were then asked to rate the voices on 10 social traits – ‘Educated’, ‘Intelligent’, ‘Rich’, ‘Working class’, ‘Friendly’, ‘Honest’, ‘Kind’, ‘Trustworthy’, ‘Aggressive’ and ‘Confident’; as well as on 10 morally ‘good’, ‘bad’ and ‘ambiguous behaviours’, which included a range of crime types. These behaviours included: ‘Return a lost wallet to its owner’, ‘Stand up for someone who is being harassed’, ‘Cheat on a romantic partner’, ‘Report a relative to the police for a minor offence’, ‘Drive dangerously’, ‘Physically assault someone’, ‘Shoplift’, ‘Touch someone sexually without consent’, ‘Vandalize a shop front.’

Get the Android app

Or read this on Hacker News

Read more on:

Photo of Study

Study

Photo of bias

bias

Photo of criminals

criminals

Related news:

News photo

Brits must prove their age on adult sites by July, says watchdog - Regulator asks people to link their credit cards, mobile accounts, or face scans for smut use to protect kids

News photo

Brits must prove their age on adult sites by July, says watchdog

News photo

More breast cancer cases found when AI used in screenings, study finds