The human voice is a primary channel for emotional communication. It is often presumed that being able to recognize vocal emotions is important for everyday socioemotional functioning, but evidence for this assumption remains scarce. Here, we examined relationships between vocal emotion recognition and socio-emotional adjustment in children. The sample included 141 6- to 8-year-old children, and the emotion tasks required them to categorize five emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, plus neutrality), as conveyed by two types of vocal emotional cues: speech prosody and non-verbal vocalizations such as laughter. Socio-emotional adjustment was evaluated by the children’s teachers using a multidimensional questionnaire of selfre...
Listeners have to pay close attention to a speaker’s tone of voice (prosody) during daily conversati...
Listeners have to pay close attention to a speaker’s tone of voice (prosody) during daily conversati...
The ability to accurately identify facial and vocal cues of emotion is important to the development ...
The human voice is a primary channel for emotional communication. It is often presumed that being ab...
Sensitivity to facial and vocal emotion is fundamental to children's social competence. Previous res...
Converging evidence demonstrates that emotion processing from facial expressions continues to improv...
Compared to adults, children demonstrate lower recognition in vocal emotion recognition tasks across...
Humans have an innate set of emotions recognised universally. However, emotion recognition also depe...
Abstract Converging evidence demonstrates that emotion processing from facial expressions continues ...
Abstract Emotional prosody results from the dynamic variation of language’s acoustic non-verbal asp...
The ability to accurately identify and label emotions in the self and others is crucial for successf...
Recent research revealed that, analogously to facial expressions, vocalizations conveying basic emot...
Emotional cues contain important information about the intentions and feelings of others. Despite a ...
Interpersonal emotion recognition requires the integration of nonverbal cues across a number of moda...
International audienceThe ability to infer the emotional states of others is central to our everyday...
Listeners have to pay close attention to a speaker’s tone of voice (prosody) during daily conversati...
Listeners have to pay close attention to a speaker’s tone of voice (prosody) during daily conversati...
The ability to accurately identify facial and vocal cues of emotion is important to the development ...
The human voice is a primary channel for emotional communication. It is often presumed that being ab...
Sensitivity to facial and vocal emotion is fundamental to children's social competence. Previous res...
Converging evidence demonstrates that emotion processing from facial expressions continues to improv...
Compared to adults, children demonstrate lower recognition in vocal emotion recognition tasks across...
Humans have an innate set of emotions recognised universally. However, emotion recognition also depe...
Abstract Converging evidence demonstrates that emotion processing from facial expressions continues ...
Abstract Emotional prosody results from the dynamic variation of language’s acoustic non-verbal asp...
The ability to accurately identify and label emotions in the self and others is crucial for successf...
Recent research revealed that, analogously to facial expressions, vocalizations conveying basic emot...
Emotional cues contain important information about the intentions and feelings of others. Despite a ...
Interpersonal emotion recognition requires the integration of nonverbal cues across a number of moda...
International audienceThe ability to infer the emotional states of others is central to our everyday...
Listeners have to pay close attention to a speaker’s tone of voice (prosody) during daily conversati...
Listeners have to pay close attention to a speaker’s tone of voice (prosody) during daily conversati...
The ability to accurately identify facial and vocal cues of emotion is important to the development ...