Supplemental Material for The Expression and Recognition of Emotions in the Voice Across Five Nations: A Lens Model Analysis Based on Acoustic Features

2016 ◽  
Vol 111 (5) ◽  
pp. 686-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petri Laukka ◽  
Hillary Anger Elfenbein ◽  
Nutankumar S. Thingujam ◽  
Thomas Rockstuhl ◽  
Frederick K. Iraki ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roza G. Kamiloğlu ◽  
Agneta H. Fischer ◽  
Disa A. Sauter

AbstractResearchers examining nonverbal communication of emotions are becoming increasingly interested in differentiations between different positive emotional states like interest, relief, and pride. But despite the importance of the voice in communicating emotion in general and positive emotion in particular, there is to date no systematic review of what characterizes vocal expressions of different positive emotions. Furthermore, integration and synthesis of current findings are lacking. In this review, we comprehensively review studies (N = 108) investigating acoustic features relating to specific positive emotions in speech prosody and nonverbal vocalizations. We find that happy voices are generally loud with considerable variability in loudness, have high and variable pitch, and are high in the first two formant frequencies. When specific positive emotions are directly compared with each other, pitch mean, loudness mean, and speech rate differ across positive emotions, with patterns mapping onto clusters of emotions, so-called emotion families. For instance, pitch is higher for epistemological emotions (amusement, interest, relief), moderate for savouring emotions (contentment and pleasure), and lower for a prosocial emotion (admiration). Some, but not all, of the differences in acoustic patterns also map on to differences in arousal levels. We end by pointing to limitations in extant work and making concrete proposals for future research on positive emotions in the voice.


Author(s):  
Gabriella M. Harari ◽  
Lindsay T. Graham ◽  
Samuel D. Gosling

Every week an estimated 20 million people collectively spend hundreds of millions of hours playing massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs). Here the authors investigate whether avatars in one such game, the World of Warcraft (WoW), convey accurate information about their players' personalities. They assessed consensus and accuracy of avatar-based impressions for 299 WoW players. The authors examined impressions based on avatars alone, and images of avatars presented along with usernames. The personality impressions yielded moderate consensus (avatar-only mean ICC = .32; avatar plus username mean ICC = .66), but no accuracy (avatar only mean r = .03; avatar plus username mean r = .01). A lens-model analysis suggests that observers made use of avatar features when forming impressions, but the features had little validity. Discussion focuses on what factors might explain the pattern of consensus but no accuracy, and on why the results might differ from those based on other virtual domains and virtual worlds.


1990 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marlys Gascho Lipe
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanto Susanto ◽  
Wang Zhenhua ◽  
Wang Yingli ◽  
Deri Sis Nanda

In the provision of linguistic evidence as one of the foci in Forensic Linguistics, Forensic Speaker Verification (FSV) includes an analysis of speech recordings to verify the voice of a criminal. As an inquiry into the validity of the available FSV, we present the analysis on Indonesian FSV system. The system consists of pairing, tagging, acoustic features extraction, and statistical analysis. There is a claim that the system meets the demand for presenting legal evidence in Indonesian court. In the system, one of the acoustic features extracted from the speech data is fundamental frequency (F0). Then, the paper aims at reviewing the method in Indonesian FSV system in terms of fundamental frequency (F0) used as the discriminatory potential. The results show that F0 has not represented an adequate interpretation of the linguistic evidence in our experimental data. It leads us to suggest that more experimental studies are required to scrutinize F0 in the system.


Author(s):  
Cornelia Fales

This chapter presents the results of a pilot study of “voiceness” in instrumental musical sound across cultures. This study grew from the proposition that not only is the voice of primal importance in music, but “voiceness” in nonvocal musical sounds is a quality that seems to exert a particular fascination to music cultures around the world. The objective is to look at the use of voiceness in music across cultures in order to discover something about the constituents of voiceness. Since it is normally not the case that voice-like instruments, either alone or in combination, sound like voices per se, it must be the case that the quality they convey as voiceness consists of some distillation of acoustic features, presumably proper to “real” vocal sound. A primary question addressed in the chapter is whether the voiceness in music of specific cultures varies in a way consistent with that culture’s primary language, or whether there are features that convey voiceness across cultures independent of language. Unlike many other instruments, the voice is capable of immense timbral variation, and the magnitude of difference across individual voices can be as great as the difference between instrument classes. The author has taken the results of the study as a preliminary indication of an abstract auditory category of voiceness consisting of perceived commonalities across several levels of vocal variation. The chapter focuses on sounds from just three cultures that are particularly illuminating in regard to these issues.


1989 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theodore Speroff ◽  
Alfred F. Connors ◽  
Neal V. Dawson

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