

por:
Dana Bradford
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980126

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Universidad Católica Abierta
versión 1
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You Speak So Well: Accent Bias, Perception, and Identity in Professional Spaces
Dana Bradford
Abstract
This article examines how racialized perception and accent bias shape professional identity, credibility, and access to authority in leadership and public-facing contexts. Using a practitioner-based qualitative case study approach, the analysis explores how assumptions related to speech, dialect, and presentation influence audience reception and professional evaluation. Drawing on scholarship in linguistic profiling, social identity theory, and stereotype threat, the article situates lived professional experience
within broader structural patterns that shape perceptions of professionalism. Findings suggest that credibility is often conditionally granted based on conformity to dominant linguistic norms rather than demonstrated competence.
Introduction
Perception plays a powerful role in how individuals are evaluated and trusted within professional spaces. Assumptions about race, speech patterns, and cultural presentation often influence judgments of competence before professional qualifications are assessed. For professionals whose linguistic expression diverges from dominant expectations, credibility may be negotiated rather than presumed.
Methodology
This article employs a practitioner-based qualitative case study approach grounded in lived experience within professional speaking and leadership environments. Reflective observation and critical incident analysis are used to examine how audience perception interacts with language, identity, and authority during professional presentations and leadership engagements.
Literature Review
Social identity theory suggests individuals are often evaluated through markers of group membership such as race and language (Tajfel & Turner, 1986). These markers influence how competence and authority are perceived within professional environments. Linguistic profiling further demonstrates that speech patterns can trigger assumptions about intelligence or credibility (Baugh, 2003).
Code-switching is commonly used by marginalized professionals as a strategy to navigate environments that privilege dominant linguistic norms (Alim & Smitherman, 2012). While such strategies may facilitate access to professional spaces, they also reveal the pressures individuals face to align with narrow definitions of professionalism.
Stereotype threat research suggests individuals who are aware of negative
stereotypes about their social group may experience increased pressure in evaluative settings (Steele, 1997). These dynamics highlight how perception can influence professional evaluation before expertise is fully considered.
Case Analysis: Perception and Professional Identity
The case examined in this study involves a professional keynote presentation
delivered in an educational conference environment attended primarily by educators, administrators, and institutional leaders. Within such professional settings, communication style often serves as a marker of perceived credibility.
Audience responses following the presentation included comments expressing
surprise at the speaker’s articulation and expertise. These reactions revealed that credibility had initially been evaluated through assumptions about speech and identity rather than through professional qualifications.
Discussion
The analysis demonstrates how accent bias and racialized perception can influence credibility attribution in professional environments. These dynamics reinforce the importance of examining how linguistic norms shape definitions of professionalism and authority.
Limitations
This study is limited by its practitioner-based scope and reliance on qualitative
reflection rather than formal quantitative data collection. Future research may expand upon these insights through comparative or longitudinal analyses of professional communication contexts.
Conclusion
Accent bias and racialized perceptions of speech remain influential factors in how professional credibility is constructed. Recognizing these dynamics is essential for creating more equitable professional environments where expertise is evaluated beyond linguistic conformity.
References
• Alim, H. S., & Smitherman, G. (2012). Articulate while Black. Oxford University Press.
• Baugh, J. (2003). Linguistic profiling. Oxford University Press.
• Steele, C. M. (1997). A threat in the air: How stereotypes shape intellectual identity and performance. American Psychologist, 52(6), 613–629.
• Tajfel, H., & Turner, J. C. (1986). The social identity theory of intergroup behavior.
Cómo citar este artículo
Formato de cita: APA
Bradford, D. (2026). You Speak So Well: Accent Bias, Perception, and Identity in Professional Spaces. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18987603
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