Authors
Nadine Lavan, Sophie K Scott, Carolyn McGettigan
Publication date
2016/12
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
Volume
145
Issue
12
Pages
1604
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
In 2 behavioral experiments, we explored how the extraction of identity-related information from familiar and unfamiliar voices is affected by naturally occurring vocal flexibility and variability, introduced by different types of vocalizations and levels of volitional control during production. In a first experiment, participants performed a speaker discrimination task on vowels, volitional (acted) laughter, and spontaneous (authentic) laughter from 5 unfamiliar speakers. We found that performance was significantly impaired for spontaneous laughter, a vocalization produced under reduced volitional control. We additionally found that the detection of identity-related information fails to generalize across different types of nonverbal vocalizations (eg, laughter vs. vowels) and across mismatches in volitional control within vocalization pairs (eg, volitional laughter vs. spontaneous laughter), with performance levels indicating an …
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