Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.

This study examined how trustworthiness impressions depend on vocal expressive and person characteristics and how their dependence may be explained by acoustical profiles. Sentences spoken in a range of emotional and conversational expressions by 20 speakers differing in age and sex were presented t...

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Main Authors: Annett Schirmer, Yenju Feng, Antarika Sen, Trevor B Penney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210555
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spelling doaj-d3db842f681c4fe98c307652104062362021-03-03T20:57:51ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01141e021055510.1371/journal.pone.0210555Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.Annett SchirmerYenju FengAntarika SenTrevor B PenneyThis study examined how trustworthiness impressions depend on vocal expressive and person characteristics and how their dependence may be explained by acoustical profiles. Sentences spoken in a range of emotional and conversational expressions by 20 speakers differing in age and sex were presented to 80 age and sex matched listeners who rated speaker trustworthiness. Positive speaker valence but not arousal consistently predicted greater perceived trustworthiness. Additionally, voices from younger as compared with older and female as compared with male speakers were judged more trustworthy. Acoustic analysis highlighted several parameters as relevant for differentiating trustworthiness ratings and showed that effects largely overlapped with those for speaker valence and age, but not sex. Specifically, a fast speech rate, a low harmonic-to-noise ratio, and a low fundamental frequency mean and standard deviation differentiated trustworthy from untrustworthy, positive from negative, and younger from older voices. Male and female voices differed in other ways. Together, these results show that a speaker's expressive as well as person characteristics shape trustworthiness impressions and that their effect likely results from a combination of low-level perceptual and higher-order conceptual processes.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210555
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annett Schirmer
Yenju Feng
Antarika Sen
Trevor B Penney
spellingShingle Annett Schirmer
Yenju Feng
Antarika Sen
Trevor B Penney
Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Annett Schirmer
Yenju Feng
Antarika Sen
Trevor B Penney
author_sort Annett Schirmer
title Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
title_short Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
title_full Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
title_fullStr Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
title_full_unstemmed Angry, old, male - and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
title_sort angry, old, male - and trustworthy? how expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This study examined how trustworthiness impressions depend on vocal expressive and person characteristics and how their dependence may be explained by acoustical profiles. Sentences spoken in a range of emotional and conversational expressions by 20 speakers differing in age and sex were presented to 80 age and sex matched listeners who rated speaker trustworthiness. Positive speaker valence but not arousal consistently predicted greater perceived trustworthiness. Additionally, voices from younger as compared with older and female as compared with male speakers were judged more trustworthy. Acoustic analysis highlighted several parameters as relevant for differentiating trustworthiness ratings and showed that effects largely overlapped with those for speaker valence and age, but not sex. Specifically, a fast speech rate, a low harmonic-to-noise ratio, and a low fundamental frequency mean and standard deviation differentiated trustworthy from untrustworthy, positive from negative, and younger from older voices. Male and female voices differed in other ways. Together, these results show that a speaker's expressive as well as person characteristics shape trustworthiness impressions and that their effect likely results from a combination of low-level perceptual and higher-order conceptual processes.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0210555
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