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Wiley InterScience | ||||
![]() PsychophysiologyVolume 44 Issue 5, Pages 827 - 837 Published Online: 3 Jul 2007 Copyright © 2009 by the Society for Psychophysiological Research Published on behalf of the Society for Psychophysiological Research
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 191K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The effects of difficulty and gain versus loss on vocal physiology and acoustics Preliminary results from the study were presented at the New York Academy of Science meeting: "Emotions Inside Out: 130 Years after Darwin's The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals," New York, November 2002. This research was supported by Swiss National Science Fund grants 1114-037504.93 and 2151-049685.96. Copyright Copyright © 2007 Society for Psychophysiological Research KEYWORDS Emotional prosody • Voice • Electroglottography • Physiology • Difficulty • Valence Abstract
To examine the basis of emotional changes to the voice, physiological and electroglottal measures were combined with acoustic speech analysis of 30 men performing a computer task in which they lost or gained points under two levels of difficulty. Predictions of the main effects of difficulty and reward on the voice were not borne out by the data. Instead, vocal changes depended largely on interactions between gain versus loss and difficulty. The rate at which the vocal folds open and close (fundamental frequency; f (Received January 5, 2006; Accepted April 29, 2007) |