Aug. 20, 2019
Baby naming time? Here鈥檚 how people judge what鈥檚 in a name
鈥淲hat鈥檚 in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.鈥 -Shakespeare, Romeo & Juliet
There has always been an interest in how the name of a thing affects our interpretation of it. Does it matter what something or someone is called? Imagine that you are going to meet either 鈥淎nne鈥 or 鈥淜ate鈥 (or 鈥淥wen鈥 or 鈥淜irk鈥). Would you expect different kinds of people, based on their names? Who would you expect to be kinder? Who would you expect to be more outgoing?
Across conducted with our colleagues from the 91快色 鈥 Joshua Bourdage and Kristen Deschamps 鈥 we found that people with softer-sounding names like 鈥淎nne鈥 or 鈥淥wen鈥 were expected to be more agreeable, emotional and hardworking; while people with harder-sounding names like 鈥淜ate鈥 or 鈥淜irk鈥 were expected to be more outgoing.
Why might the name of a person suggest different kinds of personality? Over the past century or so, research on has demonstrated that people will associate certain language sounds with particular properties. For example, the two words: 鈥渕aluma鈥 and 鈥渢akete鈥 . How would you pair them with the two shapes below?
Which shape of the ones pictured here would you associate with the made-up words 鈥榤aluma鈥 and 鈥榯akete?鈥 Created from models by Penny Pexman/David Sidhu
If you鈥檙e like , you probably paired 鈥渕aluma鈥 with the round shape, and 鈥渢akete鈥 with the jagged shape. Something about the sounds in these words (or maybe even how they feel as you say them) There have also been demonstrations of certain language sounds seeming like better fits for .
In our research, we asked the question: what about the sounds in a person鈥檚 name? Will they also lead to certain expectations about the person? or size, could the sounds in names also be associated with different personalities?
People with abrupt-sounding names are seen as extroverted
We compared names containing what are called sonorant consonants (e.g. /m/ or /l/) to those containing 鈥渧oiceless stop consonants鈥 (e.g. /k/ or /t/). Sonorants are characterized by a more smooth and continuous sound, while voiceless stops are more abrupt.
Compare the consonants in 鈥淢om, I鈥檓 online now!鈥 to 鈥淧op鈥檚 kite! It cracked!鈥 These are very different kinds of sounds, and so we asked if names containing these different sounds would be associated with different personalities.
Some examples of names we used include: Kate, Tia, Etta for the voiceless stop names and Anne, Noelle, Laurel for sonorant ones. For men, voiceless stop names included Kirk, Kurt and Tate and sonorant ones were: Owen, Noel and Lou.
We looked at the six personality factors from the model of personality: Honesty-Humility, Emotionality, eXtroversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness (how hardworking and organized a person is) and Openness (to experience). In our first two experiments, participants were asked how much they expected people with either sonorants or voiceless stops in their names to have these different personalities.
In general, we found that participants expected people with names like 鈥淎nne鈥 or 鈥淥wen鈥 to be high in Agreeableness, Emotionality and Conscientiousness. Conversely, they expected people with names like 鈥淜ate鈥 or 鈥淜irk鈥 to be high in Extroversion.
72 made-up names 鈥 and how they get judged
In a follow up experiment, we were curious how much this had to do with the names themselves versus the sounds that they contained. For example, maybe participants were just thinking of when they judged that 鈥淜irk鈥 is highly extroverted.
So, we found uncommon or made up names that still contained sonorants or voiceless stops, but that participants wouldn鈥檛 associate with existing people. Examples of sonorant names are: Ammel, Nilo and Leonne and examples of voiceless stop names we used were: Triss, Seka and Treek.
We found the same effects once again. Also, if you are ever looking for an original name for a baby, we have 72 ready to go! And we know what kinds of personalities people will associate with them!
A few ideas: Lona was rated as being very agreeable and shy. Kipus was rated as being very extroverted, but not so agreeable.
At this point we were curious 鈥 as you the reader probably are too 鈥 to know if these associations are reflected in the real world. Are people with sonorants in their names actually kinder than people with voiceless stops in their names?
This sounds outlandish, but there is recent work showing that individuals might change their appearance over time to look . Might it also work for their personalities?
No truth to the judgment
To find out, we tested over a thousand people, collecting information about their personalities and their names. We found that the answer was a resounding 鈥渘o.鈥 None of the associations that we observed in our experiments existed in the real world. There was no evidence that 鈥淎nnes鈥 are actually kinder than 鈥淜ates,鈥 or that 鈥淜urts鈥 are more outgoing than 鈥淥wens.鈥
But our other experiments show that people might think they are (if all they know about someone is their name).
This again suggests that the effect comes from the sounds of the names and is not inferred from the personalities of real people. So what is it about the sound in 鈥淎nne鈥 that makes it seem especially kind? The maluma/takete effect is often explained by a sort of metaphorical extension of the qualities of the sounds or feelings of the words to the shapes. 鈥淢aluma鈥 feels softer than 鈥渢akete鈥 as you say it, and it also involves less abrupt changes in sound.
This matches the smooth outline of the round shape we showed you earlier when we asked you to choose which shape best matches which sound. that something similar may be happening when sound is matched with personality. Maybe the smoothness of sonorants metaphorically matches an agreeable personality, while the quick changes in voiceless stops match the energetic nature of an extroverted personality. We鈥檒l need more research to know for sure.
This work helps to answer the age-old question posed by Shakespeare: what鈥檚 in a name? Our results suggest that names carry information that affects what we expect someone to be like in terms of their personality.
It seems that if 鈥淩ose鈥 were to go by another name, she may not seem as sweet.
Like what you鈥檝e read? Want more? .
, Professor of Psychology, and , PhD Candidate,
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