DocumentCode
395569
Title
Decoding whispered vocalizations: relationships between social and emotional variables
Author
Cirillo, Jasmin ; Todt, Dietmar
Author_Institution
Inst. of Biol., Free Univ. of Berlin, Germany
Volume
3
fYear
2002
fDate
18-22 Nov. 2002
Firstpage
1559
Abstract
Whispered vocalizations are wide-spread across human cultures. We studied the perceptional evaluation of this universal display and addressed specially its role in mediating particular emotions. This was done by investigating how human subjects (n=210; age: 22-30 years) judged different sets of auditory stimuli; i.e., different sentences presented in whispered or normally spoken language (control). In addition, we varied the quality of emotions encoded in the stimuli and tested also effects of signal transmission via telephone. Judgements were extracted from audiovisual recordings and from self-report data collected after each trial. Data analyses revealed that the decoding of emotions was almost equally good for whispered and spoken stimuli, and also not markedly impaired when filtered by a phone. Often, however, judgements were affected by social prejudice which could result in bimodal distributions of ratings (e.g. ´sympathetic´ vs. ´unsympathetic´). The results suggested that listeners who feel socially excluded tend to judge whispering negatively.
Keywords
auditory evoked potentials; encoding; neurophysiology; psychology; auditory stimuli; bimodal distributions; decoding; emotional variables; emotions; social variables; vocal expression; whispered vocalizations; Audio recording; Auditory displays; Data analysis; Data mining; Decoding; Humans; Natural languages; Speech; Telephony; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Neural Information Processing, 2002. ICONIP '02. Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on
Print_ISBN
981-04-7524-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICONIP.2002.1202883
Filename
1202883
Link To Document