Production, Perception, And Communicative Goals Of American Newscaster Speech
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2019
Published In
Language In Society
Abstract
Listeners often have the intuition that the speech of broadcast news reporters somehow ‘sounds different’; previous literature supports this observation and has described some distinctive aspects of newscaster register. This article presents two studies further describing the characteristic properties and functions of American English newscaster speech, focusing specifically on prosody. In the first, we investigate the production of newscaster speech. We describe the measurable differences in pitch, speed, intensity, and melodic features between newscaster and conversational speech, and connect those traits to perceptions of authority, credibility, charisma, and related characteristics. In the second, we investigate the perception of newscaster speech. Our experiments demonstrate that listeners can distinguish newscaster from conversational speech given only prosodic information, and that they use a subset of the newscasters’ distinguishing features to do so. (News, prosody, discourse registers, speech perception, credibility, authority)*
Recommended Citation
Emily Gasser, B. Ahn, Donna Jo Napoli, and Z. L. Zhou.
(2019).
"Production, Perception, And Communicative Goals Of American Newscaster Speech".
Language In Society.
Volume 48,
Issue 2.
233-259.
DOI: 10.1017/S0047404518001392
https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-linguistics/243