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The Perceptual Categorization of Enshi Mandarin Regional Varieties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 June 2015

Qingyang Yan*
Affiliation:
Ohio State University
*
*Address for correspondence: Qingyang Yan, Department of Linguistics, 1712 Neil Avenue, Columbus, OH 43210, 585-709-6768, (Email: yan.497@osu.edu)
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Abstract

The current study used a hand-drawn map task, a dialect difference rating task, and a dialect classification task to explore the relationship between participants’ ideologies about dialect differences and their classification of authentic talkers from six regional varieties in Enshi Prefecture, China. The talkers frequently mistaken for each other in the dialect classification task were those who came from counties that were perceived to have similar dialects in the hand-drawn map task and the dialect difference rating task. Participants showed a positive response bias for the Enshi dialect in classifying talkers, corresponding to the dialect difference ratings that Enshi was rated as least different. Thus participants’ classification of real talkers was largely consistent with their ideologies about differences among “imagined” dialects. Participants’ ideologies about dialect differences were shaped by their home county, and their classification performance was affected by their home county and the talker’s social background.

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Articles
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 
Figure 0

Table 1 Percentages of participants who identified each of the four main dialect regions by participant’s home county. For each dialect region, percentages for the local participants are in bold.

Figure 1

Table 2 Mean scores of the degree-of-difference ratings for six counties. The columns represent the home county of the participants and the rows represent the county being rated. The highest mean score for each county is in bold, and the lowest mean score for each county by nonlocal participants is in italics. Overall mean rating for each county collapsed across participants of different counties is shown in the rightmost column.

Figure 2

Table 3 Results of ANOVAs and pairwise Tukey tests (p<.05) on the dialect difference ratings.

Figure 3

Figure 1 Proportion of correct responses for urban and rural talkers from each variety, collapsed across participant groups. Error bars indicate standard error.

Figure 4

Table 4 Results of the paired-sample t tests (p<.05) for the participant’s home county x talker’s county origin interaction in the dialect classification task.

Figure 5

Table 5 Results of the paired-sample t tests (p<.05) for the participant’s home county x talker’s urban/rural origin x talker’s county origin interaction in the dialect classification task.

Figure 6

Table 6 Proportion of responses from each of the six response alternatives to each of the six talker groups in the dialect classification task. The correct responses for each talker group (the diagonal) are in bold.

Figure 7

Figure 2 The perceptual similarity space for the talkers in the dialect classification task.

Figure 8

Table 7 Weights for each of the six participant groups for each of two dimensions in the INDSCAL analysis.

Figure 9

Map 1 (from right to left) Hubei’s location in China, Enshi’s location in Hubei Province, and the eight counties in Enshi Prefecture.

Figure 10

Map 2 The map used in the hand-drawn map task.

Figure 11

Map 3 Locations of twelve talkers’ home towns/villages.

Figure 12

Map 4 Five perceptual dialect regions in Enshi Prefecture.