Authors
Nadine Lavan, Bethanie Short, Amy Wilding, Carolyn McGettigan
Publication date
2018
Journal
Evolution and Human Behavior
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Our ability to perceive person identity from other human voices has been described as prodigious. However, emerging evidence points to limitations in this skill. In this study, we investigated the recent and striking finding that identity perception from spontaneous laughter - a frequently occurring and important social signal in human vocal communication - is significantly impaired relative to identity perception from volitional (acted) laughter. We report the findings of an experiment in which listeners made speaker discrimination judgements from pairs of volitional and spontaneous laughter samples. The experimental design employed a range of different conditions, designed to disentangle the effects of laughter production mode versus perceptual features on the extraction of speaker identity. We find that the major driving factor of reduced accuracy for spontaneous laughter is not its perceived emotional quality but …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Lavan, B Short, A Wilding, C McGettigan - Evolution and Human Behavior, 2018