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Apparent-Time Analysis×Matched-Guise Technique×
VakgebiedTaalwetenschapTaalwetenschap
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Jaar van ontstaan19631960
GrondleggerWilliam LabovWallace Lambert and colleagues
TypeInferential design for detecting language change in progressIndirect experimental measure of language attitudes
Oorspronkelijke bronLabov, W. (1963). The social motivation of a sound change. Word, 19(3), 273–309. DOI ↗Lambert, W. E., Hodgson, R. C., Gardner, R. C., & Fillenbaum, S. (1960). Evaluational reactions to spoken languages. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 60(1), 44–51. DOI ↗
AliassenApparent-Time Construct, Apparent-Time Hypothesis, Age-Stratified Change AnalysisMatched Guise Test, Matched-Guise Experiment, Language Attitude Matched Guise
Verwant42
SamenvattingApparent-time analysis is the foundational variationist method for detecting language change in progress without waiting for time to pass. Introduced by William Labov in his 1963 study of Martha's Vineyard, it compares the speech of speakers of different ages sampled at a single moment and treats the age dimension as a proxy for historical time: if younger speakers use a variant more than older speakers, that age gradient is read as evidence of change unfolding across generations. The inference rests on the apparent-time hypothesis — that an individual's vernacular is largely fixed in adolescence and remains stable through adult life — so that the speech of today's seventy-year-olds reflects the community norms of roughly fifty years ago.The matched-guise technique is an indirect experimental method for measuring attitudes toward languages, dialects, and accents. Developed by Wallace Lambert and colleagues in 1960, it has the same bilingual or bidialectal speaker record the same passage in two or more language varieties ('guises'); listeners, believing they are hearing different speakers, rate each recording on personality and status traits. Because the voice, content, and delivery are held constant, any differences in the ratings can be attributed to listeners' attitudes toward the variety itself.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergelijken: Apparent-Time Analysis · Matched-Guise Technique. Geraadpleegd op 2026-06-24 via https://scholargate.app/nl/compare