It is well-established that non-verbal emotional communication via both facial and vocal information is more accurate when expresser and perceiver are from the same cultural group. Two accounts have been put forward to explain this finding: According to the dialect theory, culture-specific learning modulates the largely cross-culturally consistent expressions of emotions. Consequently, within-group signaling benefits from a better match of the "emotion dialect" of the expresser and perceiver. However, it has been proposed that the in-group advantage in emotion recognition could instead arise from motivational differences in the perceiver, with perceivers being more motivated when decoding signals from members of their own group. Two experim...
A Stroop interference task was used to test the hypothesis that people in different cultures are dif...
Emotional signals are crucial for sharing important information, with conspecifics, for example, to ...
Emotion expressions convey valuable information about others’ internal states and likely behaviours....
The role of motivation and cultural dialects in the in-group advantage for emotional vocalization
This study extends previous work on emotion communication across cultures with a large-scale investi...
Various studies on the perception of vocally expressed emo-tions have shown that recognition rates a...
Using a gating paradigm, this study investigated the nature of the in-group advantage in vocal emoti...
This cross-cultural study of emotional tone of voice recognition tests the in-group advantage hypoth...
Two studies provided direct support for a recently proposed dialect theory of communicating emotion,...
Nonverbal vocalizations of some emotions have been found to be recognizable both within and across c...
H. A. Elfenbein and N. Ambady’s (2002) conclusions concerning a possible in-group advantage in judgi...
The extent to which emotional recognition is universal or culturally determined has far-ranging impl...
Despite differences in language, culture, and ecology, some human characteristics are similar in peo...
Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innat...
A journal article by Prof. Fredrick Kangethe Iraki, a Lecturer at the School of Humanities and Socia...
A Stroop interference task was used to test the hypothesis that people in different cultures are dif...
Emotional signals are crucial for sharing important information, with conspecifics, for example, to ...
Emotion expressions convey valuable information about others’ internal states and likely behaviours....
The role of motivation and cultural dialects in the in-group advantage for emotional vocalization
This study extends previous work on emotion communication across cultures with a large-scale investi...
Various studies on the perception of vocally expressed emo-tions have shown that recognition rates a...
Using a gating paradigm, this study investigated the nature of the in-group advantage in vocal emoti...
This cross-cultural study of emotional tone of voice recognition tests the in-group advantage hypoth...
Two studies provided direct support for a recently proposed dialect theory of communicating emotion,...
Nonverbal vocalizations of some emotions have been found to be recognizable both within and across c...
H. A. Elfenbein and N. Ambady’s (2002) conclusions concerning a possible in-group advantage in judgi...
The extent to which emotional recognition is universal or culturally determined has far-ranging impl...
Despite differences in language, culture, and ecology, some human characteristics are similar in peo...
Facial expressions are crucial to human social communication, but the extent to which they are innat...
A journal article by Prof. Fredrick Kangethe Iraki, a Lecturer at the School of Humanities and Socia...
A Stroop interference task was used to test the hypothesis that people in different cultures are dif...
Emotional signals are crucial for sharing important information, with conspecifics, for example, to ...
Emotion expressions convey valuable information about others’ internal states and likely behaviours....