Complain like you mean it! How prosody conveys suffering even about innocuous events

IF 2.1 2区 心理学 Q1 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY Brain and Language Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.bandl.2023.105305
Maël Mauchand, Marc D. Pell
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Abstract

When complaining, speakers can use their voice to convey a feeling of pain, even when describing innocuous events. Rapid detection of emotive and identity features of the voice may constrain how the semantic content of complaints is processed, as indexed by N400 and P600 effects evoked by the final, pain-related word. Twenty-six participants listened to statements describing painful and innocuous events expressed in a neutral or complaining voice, produced by ingroup and outgroup accented speakers. Participants evaluated how hurt the speaker felt under EEG monitoring. Principal Component Analysis of Event-Related Potentials from the final word onset demonstrated N400 and P600 increases when complainers described innocuous vs. painful events in a neutral voice, but these effects were altered when utterances were expressed in a complaining voice. Independent of prosody, N400 amplitudes increased for complaints spoken in outgroup vs. ingroup accents. Results demonstrate that prosody and accent constrain the processing of spoken complaints as proposed in a parallel-constraint-satisfaction model.

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尽情抱怨吧!韵律如何传达痛苦,即使是无害的事件。
在抱怨时,即使在描述无伤大雅的事件时,演讲者也可以用自己的声音来传达痛苦的感觉。语音的情绪和身份特征的快速检测可能会限制投诉的语义内容的处理方式,如最后一个疼痛相关词引起的N400和P600效应所示。26名参与者听了以中性或抱怨的声音表达的描述痛苦和无害事件的陈述,这些陈述是由带组内口音和带组外口音的说话者发出的。参与者评估了说话者在脑电图监测下的受伤程度。从最后一个单词开始对事件相关电位的主成分分析表明,当投诉者用中性声音描述无害和痛苦的事件时,N400和P600会增加,但当用投诉的声音表达时,这些影响会改变。与韵律无关,在外群口音和内群口音中,N400振幅增加。结果表明,韵律和重音约束了口语抱怨的处理,正如在并行约束满意度模型中提出的那样。
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来源期刊
Brain and Language
Brain and Language 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.00%
发文量
82
审稿时长
20.5 weeks
期刊介绍: An interdisciplinary journal, Brain and Language publishes articles that elucidate the complex relationships among language, brain, and behavior. The journal covers the large variety of modern techniques in cognitive neuroscience, including functional and structural brain imaging, electrophysiology, cellular and molecular neurobiology, genetics, lesion-based approaches, and computational modeling. All articles must relate to human language and be relevant to the understanding of its neurobiological and neurocognitive bases. Published articles in the journal are expected to have significant theoretical novelty and/or practical implications, and use perspectives and methods from psychology, linguistics, and neuroscience along with brain data and brain measures.
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