social distribution
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

184
(FIVE YEARS 33)

H-INDEX

27
(FIVE YEARS 2)

Author(s):  
Roslyn Burns

This paper investigates the relationship between loanword adaptation and phonological borrowing by looking at the Mexican Plautdietsch speech community. Plautdietsch borrowings from Mexican Spanish sometimes undergo loanword adaptation to fit the native phonological system (e.g. Spanish [peso] > Plautdietsch [pəɪzo] 'peso'), but some community members exhibit a borrowed pattern of deaffrication that targets native lexical items (e.g. [dit͡ʃ ]) 'German' > [diʃ]). I show that the output of /t͡ʃ/ deaffrication in Mexican Plautdietsch follows the phonological pattern of northern Mexican Spanish deaffrication, rather than an inherited pattern that adapts loanwords from High German and Russian. I propose that while some mechanisms of phonetic and phonological interpretation are similar for both loanword adaptation and phonological borrowing, the novel Mexican Spanish pattern could have only entered the community due to the unique structure of phonological representation associated with advanced bilingualism. This prediction is borne out in the social distribution of deaffrication wherein men, who are expected to become advanced bilinguals, exhibit the innovation more than women. By adding a dimension of phonological representation to our models of loanword adaptation, we can expand the model's behavior to also account for outcomes involving the restructuring of the heritage language.


2021 ◽  
pp. 027623742110479
Author(s):  
Romain Brisson ◽  
Renzo Bianchi

Aesthetic disposition has been defined as the propensity to prioritize form over function and to approach any object as potentially valuable from an aesthetic standpoint. In this study, we examined whether and how aesthetic disposition was predicted by educational capital, personality trait openness, and sex. In addition, we investigated the association of educational capital and sex with openness. We compared students from a general high school (“high” educational-capital group) with students from a vocational high school (“low” educational-capital group). We found that (a) aesthetic disposition was positively associated with educational capital and, to a lesser extent, with openness, (b) sex was of minor importance in the distribution of aesthetic disposition, and (c) openness was positively linked to educational capital and unrelated to sex. Our findings support the view that educational capital plays an important role in the social distribution of aesthetic disposition and highlight a link between education and openness.


BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. e052888
Author(s):  
Nathalie Bajos ◽  
Emilie Counil ◽  
Jeanna-eve Franck ◽  
Florence Jusot ◽  
Ariane Pailhé ◽  
...  

ObjectiveAlthough social inequalities in COVID-19 mortality by race, gender and socioeconomic status are well documented, less is known about social disparities in infection rates and their shift over time. We aim to study the evolution of social disparities in infection at the early stage of the epidemic in France with regard to the policies implemented.DesignRandom population-based prospective cohort.SettingFrom May to June 2020 in France.ParticipantsAdults included in the Epidémiologie et Conditions de Vie cohort (n=77 588).Main outcome measuresSelf-reported anosmia and/or ageusia in three categories: no symptom, during the first epidemic peak (in March 2020) or thereafter (during lockdown).ResultsIn all, 2052 participants (1.53%) reported anosmia/ageusia. The social distribution of exposure factors (density of place of residence, overcrowded housing and working outside the home) was described. Multinomial regressions were used to identify changes in social variables (gender, class and race) associated with symptoms of anosmia/ageusia. Women were more likely to report symptoms during the peak and after. Racialised minorities accumulated more exposure risk factors than the mainstream population and were at higher risk of anosmia/ageusia during the peak and after. By contrast, senior executive professionals were the least exposed to the virus with the lower rate of working outside the home during lockdown. They were more affected than lower social classes at the peak of the epidemic, but this effect disappeared after the peak.ConclusionThe shift in the social profile of the epidemic was related to a shift in exposure factors under the implementation of a stringent stay-at-home order. Our study shows the importance to consider in a dynamic way the gender, socioeconomic and race direct and indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, notably to implement policies that do not widen health inequalities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 110 (5) ◽  
pp. 51-74
Author(s):  
Alexandra N. Lenz

The article focuses on the German verb geben (lit. ‘to give’) functioning as a put verb, i. e. a basic verb of goal-oriented placement. While German has been classified as a put-less language in previous research, initial studies on the German language in Austria show that geben seems to be spreading increasingly as a basic put verb, starting from the language area of Vienna. The research desiderata of this thus far overlooked phenomenon include empirically substantiated findings on its areal-horizontal and vertical-social distribution in contemporary German. In order to close this research gap, the article draws on data from a survey throughout Austria. Therein, two different registers of the dialect/standardaxis of each participant were accessed in order to assess intra-individual variation on the lexical level.


Author(s):  
Robbie Love

Abstract This paper investigates changes in swearing usage in informal speech using large-scale corpus data, comparing the occurrence and social distribution of swear words in two corpora of informal spoken British English: the demographically-sampled part of the Spoken British National Corpus 1994 (BNC1994) and the Spoken British National Corpus 2014 (BNC2014); the compilation of the latter has facilitated large-scale, diachronic analyses of authentic spoken data on a scale which has, until now, not been possible. A form and frequency analysis of a set of 16 ‘pure’ swear word lemma forms is presented. The findings reveal that swearing occurrence is significantly lower in the Spoken BNC2014 but still within a comparable range to previous studies. Furthermore, FUCK is found to overtake BLOODY as the most popular swear word lemma. Finally, the social distribution of swearing across gender and age groups generally supports the findings of previous research: males still swear more than females, and swearing still peaks in the twenties and declines thereafter. However, the distribution of swearing according to socio-economic status is found to be more complex than expected in the 2010s and requires further investigation. This paper also reflects on some of the methodological challenges associated with making comparisons between the two corpora.


2021 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-212
Author(s):  
Thomas Angeletti ◽  
Benjamin Lemoine

AbstractIn this special issue, we unpack law and finance entities and consider their co-construction, entanglement and interchanging relationship. Adopting a processual sociology lens, we aim to connect micro-technical devices and controversies to the macroscopic big picture of financialized capitalism. We combine analytical tools from pragmatic sociology, emphasizing how social reality and institutions are (re-)enacted through trials, with a dynamic and historicized sociology of the state and the juridical field. Four avenues illustrate our research program on the sociology of financial law. First, we focus on how this juridical space is co-produced by public and private forces, organizations and initiatives. Second, we look at how financial law displaces and endogenizes core regalian purposes traditionally associated with the state. Third, we show the forms of asymmetries that pervade law enforcement in financial cases. Fourth, we address how power intervenes in normal and exceptional times, such as financial crises. The legal and financial co-production of political regimes shapes economies and legitimate forms of social distribution.


Circulation ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 143 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Farah Qureshi ◽  
Kelb Bousquet-Santos ◽  
Sakurako Shiba ◽  
Scott Delaney ◽  
Anne-Josee Guimond ◽  
...  

Introduction: Numerous studies have examined the social determinants of ideal cardiovascular health (ICVH) around the world, but no work has summarized evidence to date. This study aimed to systematically review findings on the social distribution of ICVH globally, and to compare trends in high-income countries (HICs) vs. low/middle-income countries (LMICs). Methods: In November 2019, we systematically searched PubMed, Embase, and LILACS for observational studies published after the American Heart Association (AHA) defined ICVH as a combination of health factors and behaviors in 2010. Search terms included ICVH/Life’s Simple 7 and a pre-defined set of social determinants of health (i.e., education, income/wealth, socioeconomic status (SES), employment, occupation, and race/ethnicity). Each abstract was reviewed by two independent researchers. Studies were included if associations between a composite measure of ICVH and a social determinant of health was quantified using statistical methods. We evaluated risk of bias using an adapted version of the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale. Overall findings and comparisons between HICs and LMICs (defined by World Bank guidelines) were summarized narratively. Results: A total of 33 studies met inclusion criteria. Only 8 studies were from LMICs (n=4 from China), while 25 were from HICs (n=19 from the US). The most commonly assessed social determinants were education (n=18) and income/wealth (n=17). In both HICs and LMICs, few studies examined occupation or area-level measures, like rurality/urbanicity. Most studies were cross-sectional (n=27). Two thirds of studies and had a moderate (n=14, 43%) or high (n=8, 24%) risk of bias, but no systematic differences were noted by country setting. Nearly half of studies used composite ICVH measures that were of moderate or poor quality (i.e., based on only self-reported data and/or unvalidated instruments), and only 15% of studies (n=5) assessed each ICVH component using the exact criteria defined by the AHA. Despite substantial heterogeneity in how ICVH measures were derived and analyzed (e.g., as a binary, categorical, or count variable), fairly consistent associations were observed between higher levels of ICVH and higher social status (higher education, income/wealth, racial/ethnic majority status) across both HICs and LMICs. Studies of occupation (n=6, all from HICs) and area-level measures (n=4, 3 from LMICs) were less conclusive. Conclusion: Associations between higher social status and ICVH were noted in both HICs and LMICs, but most evidence was based on correlational data from cross-sectional studies in the US, primarily in relation to education and income. Important gaps in the literature include studies from LMICs, longitudinal designs to improve causal inference, and investigations of occupation, rurality/urbanicity, and race/ethnicity in non-US settings.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Károly Presinszky

AbstractThis study overviews the most recent digital methods used in Slovakia Hungarian dialectology. Slovakia Hungarian dialectology started out by using the most modern digital methods in 2010 at Nitra/Nyitra university, creating regional dialect databases, first for the Žitný ostrov/Csallóköz region and then for the whole Slovakia Hungarian dialect region. Recording and processing data has been carried out with the help of the Bihalbocs software developed by Domokos Vékás and Fruzsina Sára Vargha in Hungary. The present paper first provides an overview of digital methods in dialectology and its results for Hungarian dialects, and then summarizes the results of the Nitra/Nyitra team so far, illustrating the diversity of digitized dialectological data. It discusses the findings of publications reporting on the results of this research, including maps showing the geographical and social distribution of linguistic phenomena and acoustic phonetic analyses of data aligned with sound files. Important output of this research also includes recently published audiobooks of Slovakia Hungarian dialects. The paper outlines further avenues of research based on the most recent findings.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document