People have a well-described advantage in identifying individuals and emotions in their own culture, a phenomenon also known as the other-race and language-familiarity effect. However, it is unclear whether native-language advantages arise from genuinely enhanced capacities to extract relevant cues in familiar speech or, more simply, from cultural differences in emotional expressions. Here, to rule out production differences, we use algorithmic voice transformations to create French and Japanese stimulus pairs that differed by exactly the same acoustical characteristics. In two cross-cultural experiments, participants performed better in their native language when categorizing vocal emotional cues and detecting non-emotional pitch changes. ...
Talkers are recognized more accurately if they are speaking the listeners’ native language rather th...
International audienceThis study focuses on the cross-cultural differences in perception of audio vi...
We investigated how individual differences in language proficiency and executive control impact cros...
People have a well-described advantage in identifying individuals and emotions in their own culture,...
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 ...
Humans have an innate set of emotions recognised universally. However, emotion recognition also depe...
Abstract-A Stroop interference task was used to test the hypothesis that people in different culture...
Cross-cultural studies of emotion recognition in nonverbal vocalizations not only support the univer...
Using a gating paradigm, this study investigated the nature of the in-group advantage in vocal emoti...
PhD ThesisUniversal and culture-specific properties of the vocal communication of human emotion are ...
This study focuses on the cross-cultural differences in perception of audio visual prosodic recordin...
International audienceLanguages differ depending on the set of basic sounds they use (the inventory ...
This article focuses on individual differences in the Emotion Recognition Ability (ERA) among native...
The human voice is a powerful tool to convey emotions. Humans hear voices on a daily basis and are a...
Talkers are recognized more accurately if they are speaking the listeners’ native language rather th...
International audienceThis study focuses on the cross-cultural differences in perception of audio vi...
We investigated how individual differences in language proficiency and executive control impact cros...
People have a well-described advantage in identifying individuals and emotions in their own culture,...
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 ...
Humans have an innate set of emotions recognised universally. However, emotion recognition also depe...
Abstract-A Stroop interference task was used to test the hypothesis that people in different culture...
Cross-cultural studies of emotion recognition in nonverbal vocalizations not only support the univer...
Using a gating paradigm, this study investigated the nature of the in-group advantage in vocal emoti...
PhD ThesisUniversal and culture-specific properties of the vocal communication of human emotion are ...
This study focuses on the cross-cultural differences in perception of audio visual prosodic recordin...
International audienceLanguages differ depending on the set of basic sounds they use (the inventory ...
This article focuses on individual differences in the Emotion Recognition Ability (ERA) among native...
The human voice is a powerful tool to convey emotions. Humans hear voices on a daily basis and are a...
Talkers are recognized more accurately if they are speaking the listeners’ native language rather th...
International audienceThis study focuses on the cross-cultural differences in perception of audio vi...
We investigated how individual differences in language proficiency and executive control impact cros...