Voice‐based sexual orientation (SO) judgements can prompt group‐based discrimination. However, the relationships between stigmatization and essentialist beliefs about vocal cues …
In recent years, the study of language, gender and sexuality has become increasingly global, multiracial, intersectional, crosslinguistic and queer-and trans-inclusive. The year …
This paper integrates evidence across a range of research programs to make the case that gender nonconformity and sexual orientation are interconnected in a way that reflects a …
Listeners rely on vocal features when guessing others' sexual orientation. What is less clear is whether speakers modulate their voice to emphasize or to conceal their sexual …
JS Morandini, D Beckman-Scott, C Madill… - The Journal of Sex …, 2023 - Taylor & Francis
Previous research has identified a range of perceptual voice and speech features that differ between gay and straight men, enabling listeners to determine if a man is gay or straight at a …
S Kachel, MC Steffens, S Preuß… - Journal of Language …, 2020 - journals.sagepub.com
Although sexual orientation (SO) is perceptually ambiguous, people are able to detect it with above-chance accuracy from faces and, sometimes, from voices. Despite a multitude of …
P Hegarty, F Fasoli - Journal of homosexuality, 2024 - Taylor & Francis
Auditory gaydar happens when people's heterosexuality is called into question by their vocal characteristics. Auditory gaydar has been shown to prompt discrimination against both …
F Fasoli, A Maass, L Berghella - Journal of Homosexuality, 2023 - Taylor & Francis
Lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) people are supposed to be better at gaydar than heterosexual. Across two studies we examined auditory gaydar performed by LGB and …
F Fasoli, P Hegarty, S O'Rourke… - Psychology & Sexuality, 2024 - Taylor & Francis
Voice-based categorisation of others' sexual orientations, known as auditory gaydar judgments, can represent stressful and stigmatising events for targets. This mixed-methods …