How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody.
We explored how experimentally induced psychological stress affects the production and recognition of vocal emotions. In Study 1a, we demonstrate that sentences spoken by stressed speakers are judged by naïve listeners as sounding more stressed than sentences uttered by non-stressed speakers. In Stu...
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doaj-36a02617f7a2408f8ccc1f91612c41c92020-11-24T22:11:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011111e016502210.1371/journal.pone.0165022How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody.Silke PaulmannDesire FurnesAnne Ming BøkenesPhilip J CozzolinoWe explored how experimentally induced psychological stress affects the production and recognition of vocal emotions. In Study 1a, we demonstrate that sentences spoken by stressed speakers are judged by naïve listeners as sounding more stressed than sentences uttered by non-stressed speakers. In Study 1b, negative emotions produced by stressed speakers are generally less well recognized than the same emotions produced by non-stressed speakers. Multiple mediation analyses suggest this poorer recognition of negative stimuli was due to a mismatch between the variation of volume voiced by speakers and the range of volume expected by listeners. Together, this suggests that the stress level of the speaker affects judgments made by the receiver. In Study 2, we demonstrate that participants who were induced with a feeling of stress before carrying out an emotional prosody recognition task performed worse than non-stressed participants. Overall, findings suggest detrimental effects of induced stress on interpersonal sensitivity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5089770?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Silke Paulmann Desire Furnes Anne Ming Bøkenes Philip J Cozzolino |
spellingShingle |
Silke Paulmann Desire Furnes Anne Ming Bøkenes Philip J Cozzolino How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Silke Paulmann Desire Furnes Anne Ming Bøkenes Philip J Cozzolino |
author_sort |
Silke Paulmann |
title |
How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody. |
title_short |
How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody. |
title_full |
How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody. |
title_fullStr |
How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody. |
title_full_unstemmed |
How Psychological Stress Affects Emotional Prosody. |
title_sort |
how psychological stress affects emotional prosody. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
We explored how experimentally induced psychological stress affects the production and recognition of vocal emotions. In Study 1a, we demonstrate that sentences spoken by stressed speakers are judged by naïve listeners as sounding more stressed than sentences uttered by non-stressed speakers. In Study 1b, negative emotions produced by stressed speakers are generally less well recognized than the same emotions produced by non-stressed speakers. Multiple mediation analyses suggest this poorer recognition of negative stimuli was due to a mismatch between the variation of volume voiced by speakers and the range of volume expected by listeners. Together, this suggests that the stress level of the speaker affects judgments made by the receiver. In Study 2, we demonstrate that participants who were induced with a feeling of stress before carrying out an emotional prosody recognition task performed worse than non-stressed participants. Overall, findings suggest detrimental effects of induced stress on interpersonal sensitivity. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5089770?pdf=render |
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