To ensure that listeners pay attention and do not habituate, emotionally intense vocalizations may be under evolutionary pressure to exploit processing biases in the auditory system by maximising their bottom-up salience. This “salience code” hypothesis was tested using 128 human nonverbal vocalizations representing eight emotions: amusement, anger, disgust, effort, fear, pain, pleasure, and sadness. As expected, within each emotion category salience ratings derived from pairwise comparisons strongly correlated with perceived emotion intensity. For example, while laughs as a class were less salient than screams of fear, salience scores almost perfectly explained the perceived intensity of both amusement and fear considered separately. Valid...
The ability to perceive the emotions of others is crucial for everyday social interactions. Importan...
Vocalizations including laughter, cries, moans, or screams constitute a potent source of information...
During much of the past century, it was widely believed that phonemes--the human speech sounds that ...
The human voice is a potent source of information to signal emotion. Nonspeech vocalizations (e.g., ...
Human vocalizations (HV), as well as environmental sounds, convey a wide range of information, inclu...
Although its role is frequently stressed in acoustic profile for vocal emotion, sound intensity is f...
Work on facial expressions of emotions (Calder, Burton, Miller, Young, & Akamatsu, 2001) and emotion...
The unfolding dynamics of the vocal expression of emotions are crucial for the decoding of the emoti...
The unfolding dynamics of the vocal expression of emotions are crucial for the decoding of the emoti...
Emotions play a fundamental role in human communication. Particularly music and films are capable of...
Many animal vocalizations contain nonlinear acoustic phenomena as a consequence of physiological aro...
The ability to identify emotions from the human voice is a crucial aspect of social cognition. Curr...
Historically there has been a conceptual distinction between reason and passion, i.e. emotions and h...
Most research on nonverbal emotional vocalizations is based on actor portrayals, but how similar are...
Vocalizations like screams and laughs are used to communicate affective states, but what acoustic cu...
The ability to perceive the emotions of others is crucial for everyday social interactions. Importan...
Vocalizations including laughter, cries, moans, or screams constitute a potent source of information...
During much of the past century, it was widely believed that phonemes--the human speech sounds that ...
The human voice is a potent source of information to signal emotion. Nonspeech vocalizations (e.g., ...
Human vocalizations (HV), as well as environmental sounds, convey a wide range of information, inclu...
Although its role is frequently stressed in acoustic profile for vocal emotion, sound intensity is f...
Work on facial expressions of emotions (Calder, Burton, Miller, Young, & Akamatsu, 2001) and emotion...
The unfolding dynamics of the vocal expression of emotions are crucial for the decoding of the emoti...
The unfolding dynamics of the vocal expression of emotions are crucial for the decoding of the emoti...
Emotions play a fundamental role in human communication. Particularly music and films are capable of...
Many animal vocalizations contain nonlinear acoustic phenomena as a consequence of physiological aro...
The ability to identify emotions from the human voice is a crucial aspect of social cognition. Curr...
Historically there has been a conceptual distinction between reason and passion, i.e. emotions and h...
Most research on nonverbal emotional vocalizations is based on actor portrayals, but how similar are...
Vocalizations like screams and laughs are used to communicate affective states, but what acoustic cu...
The ability to perceive the emotions of others is crucial for everyday social interactions. Importan...
Vocalizations including laughter, cries, moans, or screams constitute a potent source of information...
During much of the past century, it was widely believed that phonemes--the human speech sounds that ...