2021
DOI: 10.1037/emo0001024
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Recognition of vocal socioemotional expressions at varying levels of emotional intensity.

Abstract: Nonverbal expressions of emotion can vary in intensity, from ambiguous to prototypical exemplars: for instance, facial displays of happiness may range from a faint smile to a full-blown grin. Previous work suggests that the accuracy with which facial expressions are recognized as the intended emotion increases with emotional intensity, although this pattern depends on the displayed emotion. Less is known about the association between emotional intensity and the recognition of vocal emotional expressions (affec… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(40 reference statements)
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“…sadness, disgust, anger, fear) but only using happiness as a positive emotion, making it necessary to study different positive emotions as well (Sauter, 2010). The scientific community has also been calling for more socially relevant and naturally occurring emotional stimuli in emotional recognition research that is free of other cues (such as verbal meaning or facial expressions) (Morningstar et al, 2021). Recorded lectures conveying the same content but expressing different emotions by vocal prosody only are therefore a suitable stimulus to verify whether there are differences in emotion recognition between native and non-native speakers.…”
Section: Emotion Recognition Of Native and Non-native Speakersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…sadness, disgust, anger, fear) but only using happiness as a positive emotion, making it necessary to study different positive emotions as well (Sauter, 2010). The scientific community has also been calling for more socially relevant and naturally occurring emotional stimuli in emotional recognition research that is free of other cues (such as verbal meaning or facial expressions) (Morningstar et al, 2021). Recorded lectures conveying the same content but expressing different emotions by vocal prosody only are therefore a suitable stimulus to verify whether there are differences in emotion recognition between native and non-native speakers.…”
Section: Emotion Recognition Of Native and Non-native Speakersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Emotions may also vary according to the intensity of the emotion expression. Research in facial emotion recognition generally shows better recognition accuracy for stimuli with higher emotional intensity (Montirosso et al, 2010;Picardo et al, 2016); however, research in vocal emotion recognition suggests that stimulus intensity may differentially impact the recognition of different emotion categories (Morningstar et al, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%