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The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?

Voice-induced cross-taxa emotional recognition is the ability to understand the emotional state of another species based on its voice. In the past, induced affective states, experience-dependent higher cognitive processes or cross-taxa universal acoustic coding and processing mechanisms have been di...

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Autores principales: Scheumann, Marina, Hasting, Anna S., Kotz, Sonja A., Zimmermann, Elke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3951321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24621604
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091192
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author Scheumann, Marina
Hasting, Anna S.
Kotz, Sonja A.
Zimmermann, Elke
author_facet Scheumann, Marina
Hasting, Anna S.
Kotz, Sonja A.
Zimmermann, Elke
author_sort Scheumann, Marina
collection PubMed
description Voice-induced cross-taxa emotional recognition is the ability to understand the emotional state of another species based on its voice. In the past, induced affective states, experience-dependent higher cognitive processes or cross-taxa universal acoustic coding and processing mechanisms have been discussed to underlie this ability in humans. The present study sets out to distinguish the influence of familiarity and phylogeny on voice-induced cross-taxa emotional perception in humans. For the first time, two perspectives are taken into account: the self- (i.e. emotional valence induced in the listener) versus the others-perspective (i.e. correct recognition of the emotional valence of the recording context). Twenty-eight male participants listened to 192 vocalizations of four different species (human infant, dog, chimpanzee and tree shrew). Stimuli were recorded either in an agonistic (negative emotional valence) or affiliative (positive emotional valence) context. Participants rated the emotional valence of the stimuli adopting self- and others-perspective by using a 5-point version of the Self-Assessment Manikin (SAM). Familiarity was assessed based on subjective rating, objective labelling of the respective stimuli and interaction time with the respective species. Participants reliably recognized the emotional valence of human voices, whereas the results for animal voices were mixed. The correct classification of animal voices depended on the listener's familiarity with the species and the call type/recording context, whereas there was less influence of induced emotional states and phylogeny. Our results provide first evidence that explicit voice-induced cross-taxa emotional recognition in humans is shaped more by experience-dependent cognitive mechanisms than by induced affective states or cross-taxa universal acoustic coding and processing mechanisms.
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spelling pubmed-39513212014-03-13 The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States? Scheumann, Marina Hasting, Anna S. Kotz, Sonja A. Zimmermann, Elke PLoS One Research Article Voice-induced cross-taxa emotional recognition is the ability to understand the emotional state of another species based on its voice. In the past, induced affective states, experience-dependent higher cognitive processes or cross-taxa universal acoustic coding and processing mechanisms have been discussed to underlie this ability in humans. The present study sets out to distinguish the influence of familiarity and phylogeny on voice-induced cross-taxa emotional perception in humans. For the first time, two perspectives are taken into account: the self- (i.e. emotional valence induced in the listener) versus the others-perspective (i.e. correct recognition of the emotional valence of the recording context). Twenty-eight male participants listened to 192 vocalizations of four different species (human infant, dog, chimpanzee and tree shrew). Stimuli were recorded either in an agonistic (negative emotional valence) or affiliative (positive emotional valence) context. Participants rated the emotional valence of the stimuli adopting self- and others-perspective by using a 5-point version of the Self-Assessment Manikin (SAM). Familiarity was assessed based on subjective rating, objective labelling of the respective stimuli and interaction time with the respective species. Participants reliably recognized the emotional valence of human voices, whereas the results for animal voices were mixed. The correct classification of animal voices depended on the listener's familiarity with the species and the call type/recording context, whereas there was less influence of induced emotional states and phylogeny. Our results provide first evidence that explicit voice-induced cross-taxa emotional recognition in humans is shaped more by experience-dependent cognitive mechanisms than by induced affective states or cross-taxa universal acoustic coding and processing mechanisms. Public Library of Science 2014-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3951321/ /pubmed/24621604 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091192 Text en © 2014 Scheumann et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Scheumann, Marina
Hasting, Anna S.
Kotz, Sonja A.
Zimmermann, Elke
The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?
title The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?
title_full The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?
title_fullStr The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?
title_full_unstemmed The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?
title_short The Voice of Emotion across Species: How Do Human Listeners Recognize Animals' Affective States?
title_sort voice of emotion across species: how do human listeners recognize animals' affective states?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3951321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24621604
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091192
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