2013
DOI: 10.1002/jip.1381
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Angry Voices from the Past and Present: Effects on Adults' and Children's Earwitness Memory

Abstract: The major aim was to examine the effect of the perpetrator's tone of voice and time delay on voice recognition. In addition, the effect of two types of voice description interviews intended to strengthen voice encoding was tested. Both 11‐ to 13‐year‐olds (n = 160) and adults (n = 148) heard an unfamiliar voice for 40 s. The perpetrator either spoke in a normal tone at encoding and in the lineup (congruent), or in an angry tone at encoding and a normal tone in the lineup (incongruent). Witnesses were then inte… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
(60 reference statements)
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“…In keeping with previous voice identification literature, our results reveal overall low accuracy, high choosing rates, and particularly error-prone performance when the target is absent (Kerstholt et al, 2004;Öhman, Eriksson, & Granhag, 2011, 2013a, 2013bPhilippon, Cherryman, Bull, & Vrij, 2007;Smith et al, 2019). Voices differ from each other (betweenperson variability), and the same voice can sound very different across utterances (withinperson variability) (Lavan, Burton, Scott, & McGettigan, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…In keeping with previous voice identification literature, our results reveal overall low accuracy, high choosing rates, and particularly error-prone performance when the target is absent (Kerstholt et al, 2004;Öhman, Eriksson, & Granhag, 2011, 2013a, 2013bPhilippon, Cherryman, Bull, & Vrij, 2007;Smith et al, 2019). Voices differ from each other (betweenperson variability), and the same voice can sound very different across utterances (withinperson variability) (Lavan, Burton, Scott, & McGettigan, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…However, both studies lack the data from a control condition in which the target spoke with a neutral tone at study and at test. More recent work by Ohman, Eriksson and Granhag (2013) provides this neutral baseline, and casts some doubt on previous results, revealing no effects of emotional change between study and lineup. Whilst, floor effects may have precluded any impact of emotion in this study, the fact that the emotional voice again did not facilitate subsequent recognition relative to the neutral base remains a surprise.…”
Section: The Influence Of Vocal Emotion On Voice Processingmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Although the results of previous studies vary widely, hit rates tend to be low (< 50%) or at chance-level (e.g. Kerstholt, Jansen, Van Amelsvoort, & Broeders, 2004Ohman, Eriksson, & Granhag, 2011, 2013a, 2013bPerfect, Hunt, & Harris, 2002). If the participant does not select the target there are three other possible outcomes.…”
Section: Problems Associated With Voice Identificationmentioning
confidence: 97%