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科学美国人60秒:自信的语气可以弥补口音造成的不信任

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  • This is Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Lucy Huang.
  • 这里是科学美国人——60秒科学。我是露西·黄。
  • About 1.5 billion people speak English around the world.
  • 全球有约15亿人说英语。
  • But for more than 1.1 billion of them, English is their second language — often with a noticeable accent.
  • 但其中有超过11亿人的母语并不是英语,因此他们说英语时往往带有明显的口音。
  • "Your accent really reveals a lot about who you are and your identity.
  • “你的口音的确会透露有关你本身和身份的大量信息。
  • It will tell people what your native language is, be able to tell you probably where you come from."
  • 口音能告诉他人你的母语是什么,可能也会让别人知道你来自哪里。”
  • Marc Pell, a communications professor at McGill University in Montreal.
  • 位于蒙特利尔的麦吉尔大学的传播学教授马克·佩尔说到。
  • And according to Pell, one reaction to a different accent can be a bias against that person.
  • 佩尔表示,对不同口音产生反应可能是对这个人的偏见。
  • "Previous research that has been done elsewhere showed that people who have an accent tend to be trusted less,
  • “其他地区做的早前研究表明,有口音的人往往可信度会降低,
  • simply because they have an accent.
  • 仅仅是因为他们说英语有口音。
  • But the idea that we would have a bias against anyone who sort of doesn't sound like us
  • 但我们会对口音和我们不同的人产生偏见,
  • I think probably relates to some sort of evolutionary or long-standing suspicion we have of outsiders or strangers.
  • 可能与某种进化有关,或可能与我们长期以来对外来者或陌生人抱有的怀疑态度有关。
  • So this might be sort of an ingrained response that we have to the accent."
  • 因此,这可能是我们对口音的某种根深蒂固的反应。”
  • But accents aren't the only thing we listen for when we have to decide if we trust another person.
  • 但在判定是否信任另一个人时,口音并非我们留心听的唯一因素。
  • Tone of voice also plays a role.
  • 语气也在发挥作用。
  • Pell and his team wanted to know if people would trust a confident tone, even if it came from someone with an accent.
  • 佩尔及其团队想知道,人们是否会相信说话自信的人,即使这个人说话有口音。
  • The researchers had Canadian English speakers listen to different versions of people saying neutral statements like she has access to the building"
  • 研究人员让说加拿大英语的人听不同口音版本的中立陈述句,比如“她走进了大楼”这种句子,
  • while they were getting a brain scan in an MRI machine.
  • 同时用核磁共振成像扫描听录音者的大脑。
  • Subjects heard someone say it with a confident neutral tone with a Canadian English accent, an Australian accent or a French accent.
  • 实验对象听到的是语气自信的中立句,分别带有加拿大英语、澳大利亚或法国口音。
  • Participants also heard the sentence with the three accents spoken in a doubtful or neutral tone.
  • 参与者还会听到带有这三种口音的人以怀疑或中立语气所说的话。
  • The MRI scans showed that
  • 核磁共振扫描结果显示,
  • the participants had to use more brain power to decide if they could trust the statements said with the non-native accents.
  • 参与者不得不用更多脑力来决定是否可以相信那些用非本地口音说的陈述句。
  • When the study participants heard the Australian or French accents,
  • 当研究参与者听到澳大利亚或法国口音时,
  • blood flow increased to the to the temporal lobe, part of the brain that we use to process sound.
  • 他们颞叶处的血流明显增多,颞叶是大脑处理声音的区域。
  • "They seem to have to analyze that perhaps more intensively or, or for a longer period of time
  • “他们似乎不得不进行更集中或更长时间的分析,
  • to make this decision about whether they truly believed the speaker."
  • 才能决定是否真正相信说话者。”
  • The work is in the journal NeuroImage.
  • 这项研究发表在《神经图像》期刊上。
  • When asked, the participants reported not trusting either Australian or French accents —
  • 在被询问时,参与者反馈说他们不信任带有澳大利亚或法国口音的人,
  • except for when the statements were said confidently.
  • 除非说话者在陈述时充满自信。
  • Seems that confidence speaks for itself.
  • 看起来自信本身不言自明。


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This is Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Lucy Huang.
About 1.5 billion people speak English around the world. But for more than 1.1 billion of them, English is their second languageoften with a noticeable accent.
"Your accent really reveals a lot about who you are and your identity. It will tell people what your native language is, be able to tell you probably where you come from." Marc Pell, a communications professor at McGill University in Montreal. And according to Pell, one reaction to a different accent can be a bias against that person.
"Previous research that has been done elsewhere showed that people who have an accent tend to be trusted less, simply because they have an accent. But the idea that we would have a bias against anyone who sort of doesn't sound like us I think probably relates to some sort of evolutionary or long-standing suspicion we have of outsiders or strangers. So this might be sort of an ingrained response that we have to the accent."
But accents aren't the only thing we listen for when we have to decide if we trust another person. Tone of voice also plays a role. Pell and his team wanted to know if people would trust a confident tone, even if it came from someone with an accent.

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口音.jpg
The researchers had Canadian English speakers listen to different versions of people saying neutral statements like she has access to the building" while they were getting a brain scan in an MRI machine. Subjects heard someone say it with a confident neutral tone with a Canadian English accent, an Australian accent or a French accent. Participants also heard the sentence with the three accents spoken in a doubtful or neutral tone.
The MRI scans showed that the participants had to use more brain power to decide if they could trust the statements said with the non-native accents. When the study participants heard the Australian or French accents, blood flow increased to the to the temporal lobe, part of the brain that we use to process sound.
MP: "They seem to have to analyze that perhaps more intensively or, or for a longer period of time to make this decision about whether they truly believed the speaker."
The work is in the journal NeuroImage.
When asked, the participants reported not trusting either Australian or French accentsexcept for when the statements were said confidently. Seems that confidence speaks for itself.
Thanks for listening for Scientific American — 60-Second Science Science. I'm Lucy Huang.

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重点单词   查看全部解释    
identity [ai'dentiti]

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n. 身份,一致,特征

 
trusting ['trʌstiŋ]

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adj. 信任的;轻信的 v. 信赖(trust的ing

 
tend [tend]

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v. 趋向,易于,照料,护理

 
suspicion [səs'piʃən]

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n. 猜疑,怀疑

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decision [di'siʒən]

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n. 决定,决策

 
reaction [ri'ækʃən]

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n. 反应,反作用力,化学反应

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temporal ['tempərəl]

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adj. 当时的,暂时的,现世的 n. 世间的事物

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bias ['baiəs]

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n. 偏见,斜纹
vt. 使偏心

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neutral ['nju:trəl]

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adj. 中立的,中性的
n. 中立者,空挡的

 
intensively

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adv. 强烈地;集中地

 

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