Early emotional prosody perception based on different speaker voices

Neuroreport
Silke Paulmann, Sonja A Kotz

Abstract

Decoding verbal and nonverbal emotional expressions is an important part of speech communication. Although various studies have tried to specify the brain regions that underlie different emotions conveyed in speech, few studies have aimed to specify the time course of emotional speech decoding. We used event-related potentials to determine when emotional speech is first differentiated from neutral speech. Participants engaged in an implicit emotional processing task (probe verification) while listening to emotional sentences spoken by a female and a male speaker. Independent of speaker voice, emotional sentences could be differentiated from neutral sentences as early as 200 ms after sentence onset (P200), suggesting rapid emotional decoding.

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Citations

Jan 5, 2012·Cognition & Emotion·Christina RegenbogenUte Habel
Mar 22, 2012·Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience·Ana P PinheiroMargaret Niznikiewicz
Sep 8, 2012·Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience·Patricia Garrido-VásquezSonja A Kotz
Dec 3, 2011·Neuroreport·Taosheng LiuMargaret A Niznikiewicz
Mar 24, 2009·Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience·Disa Anna Sauter, Martin Eimer
Jan 31, 2013·BMC Neuroscience·Julia C GädekeBrigitte Röder
Nov 17, 2011·PloS One·Marc D Pell, Sonja A Kotz
May 5, 2012·PloS One·Sarah JessenSonja A Kotz
May 23, 2012·PloS One·Katharina Sophia GoerlichSander Martens
Nov 3, 2012·PloS One·Rachel Schwartz, Marc D Pell
May 1, 2009·Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience·Boris KotchoubeyNiels Birbaumer
May 26, 2010·Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience·Silke Paulmann, Marc D Pell
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