The 2016 European Union referendum campaign has been depicted as a battle between ‘heads’ and ‘hearts’, reason and emotion. Voters’ propensity to trust their feelings over expert knowledge has sparked debate about the future of democratic politics in what is increasingly believed to be an ‘age of emotion’. In this article, we argue that we can learn from the ways that historians have approached the study of emotions and everyday politics to help us make sense of this present moment. Drawing on William Reddy’s concept of ‘emotional regimes’, we analyse the position of emotion in qualitative, ‘everyday narratives’ about the 2016 European Union referendum. Using new evidence from the Mass Observation Archive, we argue that while reason and emotion are inextricable facets of political decision-making, citizens themselves understand the two processes as distinct and competing.
An evaluation of commercial off-the-shelf speaker verification systems is reported. The performance of several systems, which were offered for testing, is analyzed against criteria designed to identify strengths and weaknesses that would determine their suitability for the use by government service agencies. Results for three text-dependent systems by Nuance, Persay and Scansoft are presented in this paper.
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