Various studies on the perception of vocally expressed emo-tions have shown that recognition rates are higher if speaker and listener belong to the same cultural or linguistic group. This so-called in-group advantage is commonly attributed to prosodic differences in the expression of emotion across groups. Evidence comes mostly from using cross-linguistic and/or cross-cultural study designs. Previous research suggests that varieties of German differ in their use of prosody and can be discriminated based on prosodic features alone. In this paper, we tested whether emotion recognition rates differ across varieties of German: Listeners from three dialectal areas (Hamburg, Vienna, Zurich) identified emotions on semantically neutral sen-tences (...
Does our perception of others’ emotional signals depend on the language we speak or is our perceptio...
This study focused on how pitch contours in German speech correlate with different emotions of the s...
Previous studies on prosody perception showed inconsistent results concerning the functional role of...
It is well-established that non-verbal emotional communication via both facial and vocal information...
Prosody conveys information about the emotional state of the speaker. In this study we test whether...
Twenty English-speaking listeners judged the emotive intent of utterances spoken by male and female ...
Using a gating paradigm, this study investigated the nature of the in-group advantage in vocal emoti...
This study extends previous work on emotion communication across cultures with a large-scale investi...
Whereas the perception of emotion from facial expression has been extensively studied cross-cultural...
This cross-cultural study of emotional tone of voice recognition tests the in-group advantage hypoth...
Expressions of basic emotions (joy, sadness, anger, fear, disgust) can be recognized pan-culturally ...
This article experimentally investigates the similarities and the differences between German and Ita...
The extent to which emotional recognition is universal or culturally determined has far-ranging impl...
This study investigates the perception and production of emotional prosody by native and non-native ...
To infer emotions in speech, listeners can use the way people speak (prosody) or what people say (se...
Does our perception of others’ emotional signals depend on the language we speak or is our perceptio...
This study focused on how pitch contours in German speech correlate with different emotions of the s...
Previous studies on prosody perception showed inconsistent results concerning the functional role of...
It is well-established that non-verbal emotional communication via both facial and vocal information...
Prosody conveys information about the emotional state of the speaker. In this study we test whether...
Twenty English-speaking listeners judged the emotive intent of utterances spoken by male and female ...
Using a gating paradigm, this study investigated the nature of the in-group advantage in vocal emoti...
This study extends previous work on emotion communication across cultures with a large-scale investi...
Whereas the perception of emotion from facial expression has been extensively studied cross-cultural...
This cross-cultural study of emotional tone of voice recognition tests the in-group advantage hypoth...
Expressions of basic emotions (joy, sadness, anger, fear, disgust) can be recognized pan-culturally ...
This article experimentally investigates the similarities and the differences between German and Ita...
The extent to which emotional recognition is universal or culturally determined has far-ranging impl...
This study investigates the perception and production of emotional prosody by native and non-native ...
To infer emotions in speech, listeners can use the way people speak (prosody) or what people say (se...
Does our perception of others’ emotional signals depend on the language we speak or is our perceptio...
This study focused on how pitch contours in German speech correlate with different emotions of the s...
Previous studies on prosody perception showed inconsistent results concerning the functional role of...