Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish

Classical grammatical studies in Spanish only consider binary gender and claim that gender assignment is an arbitrary process. However, psycholinguistic evidence suggests that gender morphology, lexical semantics, and gender stereotypes condition language processing. Recently, gender-inclusive langu...

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Main Authors: Stetie Noelia Ayelén, Zunino Gabriela Mariel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2024-01-01
Series:Psychology of Language and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.58734/plc-2024-0016
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author Stetie Noelia Ayelén
Zunino Gabriela Mariel
author_facet Stetie Noelia Ayelén
Zunino Gabriela Mariel
author_sort Stetie Noelia Ayelén
collection DOAJ
description Classical grammatical studies in Spanish only consider binary gender and claim that gender assignment is an arbitrary process. However, psycholinguistic evidence suggests that gender morphology, lexical semantics, and gender stereotypes condition language processing. Recently, gender-inclusive language proposals have proliferated in several languages, and in Spanish, the use of the nonbinary morphological variant [-e] has spread considerably. This article presents the results of a self-paced reading task that evaluated the influence of gender stereotypes (role names with semantic male or female bias) on the processing of this morphological innovation. There was a semantic bias effect in the first spillover word, but there were no statistically significant differences for noun phrase, wrap-up region, and total sentence reading times. The results showed that gender stereotype effect occurs relatively early and at the local level. Moreover, nonbinary morphological innovations may be specializing in the representation of mixed groups of people.
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spelling doaj-art-f61cd3c22e0845ea85c972dfc009cba32025-02-02T15:49:16ZengSciendoPsychology of Language and Communication2083-85062024-01-0128144646910.58734/plc-2024-0016Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in SpanishStetie Noelia Ayelén0Zunino Gabriela Mariel11Sede central, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Argentina1Sede central, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, ArgentinaClassical grammatical studies in Spanish only consider binary gender and claim that gender assignment is an arbitrary process. However, psycholinguistic evidence suggests that gender morphology, lexical semantics, and gender stereotypes condition language processing. Recently, gender-inclusive language proposals have proliferated in several languages, and in Spanish, the use of the nonbinary morphological variant [-e] has spread considerably. This article presents the results of a self-paced reading task that evaluated the influence of gender stereotypes (role names with semantic male or female bias) on the processing of this morphological innovation. There was a semantic bias effect in the first spillover word, but there were no statistically significant differences for noun phrase, wrap-up region, and total sentence reading times. The results showed that gender stereotype effect occurs relatively early and at the local level. Moreover, nonbinary morphological innovations may be specializing in the representation of mixed groups of people.https://doi.org/10.58734/plc-2024-0016gender-inclusive languagenonbinary languagemorphological innovationsgender stereotypeslanguage processing
spellingShingle Stetie Noelia Ayelén
Zunino Gabriela Mariel
Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish
Psychology of Language and Communication
gender-inclusive language
nonbinary language
morphological innovations
gender stereotypes
language processing
title Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish
title_full Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish
title_fullStr Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish
title_full_unstemmed Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish
title_short Do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations? The case of gender-inclusive language in Spanish
title_sort do gender stereotypes bias the processing of morphological innovations the case of gender inclusive language in spanish
topic gender-inclusive language
nonbinary language
morphological innovations
gender stereotypes
language processing
url https://doi.org/10.58734/plc-2024-0016
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