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Recognizing Emotions in a Foreign Language
Authors:Marc D. Pell  Laura Monetta  Silke Paulmann  Sonja A. Kotz
Affiliation:(1) School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, McGill University, 1266, ave. des Pins Ouest, Montréal, QC, H3G 1A8, Canada;(2) Research Group on Neurocognition of Rhythm in Communication, Max Planck Institute of Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:
Expressions of basic emotions (joy, sadness, anger, fear, disgust) can be recognized pan-culturally from the face and it is assumed that these emotions can be recognized from a speaker’s voice, regardless of an individual’s culture or linguistic ability. Here, we compared how monolingual speakers of Argentine Spanish recognize basic emotions from pseudo-utterances (“nonsense speech”) produced in their native language and in three foreign languages (English, German, Arabic). Results indicated that vocal expressions of basic emotions could be decoded in each language condition at accuracy levels exceeding chance, although Spanish listeners performed significantly better overall in their native language (“in-group advantage”). Our findings argue that the ability to understand vocally-expressed emotions in speech is partly independent of linguistic ability and involves universal principles, although this ability is also shaped by linguistic and cultural variables.
Contact Information Marc D. PellEmail: URL: www.mcgill.ca/pell_lab
Keywords:Emotional speech processing  Affective prosody  Vocal expression  Cultural factors  Cross-linguistic group study
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