Pitch affects human (Homo sapiens) perception of emotional arousal from diverse animal calls.

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Journal of Comparative Psychology Pub Date : 2024-05-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-23 DOI:10.1037/com0000366
Jay W Schwartz, Kayleigh H Pierson, Alexander K Reece
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Abstract

A growing body of research demonstrates that humans can accurately perceive the emotional states of animals solely by listening to their calls, highlighting shared evolutionary ancestry. Yet, the cognitive and perceptual mechanisms underlying heterospecific emotion perception have remained open to investigation. One hypothesis is that humans rely on simple acoustic heuristics to make such judgments, for example, perceiving higher-pitched calls as reflecting heightened emotional arousal (the "pitch rule"). This could lead to accurate judgments of emotion since in most mammals, as in humans, vocal fundamental frequency (the acoustic determinant of the pitch percept) does objectively correlate with emotional arousal. In the present study, we used digital pitch manipulation to create pairs of animal calls that were perceptually identical except for pitch, and we measured human perceptions of the caller's emotional arousal using an online survey. Calls of six phylogenetically diverse species were included as stimuli. Participants attributed slightly but statistically significantly higher arousal to higher-pitched versions of the same calls. Variation in application of the pitch rule across species was not well explained by familiarity, and prior experience with cats did not significantly predict sensitivity to pitch in cat vocalizations. Cross-species variation also did not align with phylogenetic distance from humans, or the hypothetical usefulness of pitch for making accurate judgments. Thus, the pitch rule may be a "mammalomorphic" heuristic leading to accurate emotion judgments in some taxa and call types and erroneous judgments in others, depending in part on phylogenetic distance and the mechanisms of call production. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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音高会影响人类(智人)对不同动物叫声的情感唤起的感知。
越来越多的研究表明,人类仅通过倾听动物的叫声就能准确感知动物的情绪状态,这突出了共同的进化祖先。然而,异性情感感知背后的认知和感知机制仍有待研究。一种假设是,人类依靠简单的声学启发式来做出这样的判断,例如,将音调更高的叫声感知为反映了情绪唤醒的增强(“音调规则”)。这可能会导致对情绪的准确判断,因为在大多数哺乳动物中,就像在人类中一样,发声基频(音高感知的声学决定因素)确实与情绪唤醒客观相关。在本研究中,我们使用数字音高操纵来创建除音高外在感知上完全相同的动物叫声对,并通过在线调查测量了人类对来电者情绪唤醒的感知。六个系统发育不同物种的叫声被包括在内作为刺激。参与者将轻微但统计上显著较高的唤醒归因于相同叫声的高音版本。不同物种之间音高规则应用的变化并不能很好地用熟悉度来解释,之前与猫相处的经验也不能显著预测猫发声对音高的敏感性。跨物种变异也不符合与人类的系统发育距离,也不符合音高对做出准确判断的假设有用性。因此,音高规则可能是一种“长毛象”启发式,导致某些分类群和叫声类型的情绪判断准确,而另一些分类群和声调类型的判断错误,这在一定程度上取决于系统发育距离和叫声产生的机制。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Comparative Psychology publishes original research from a comparative perspective on the behavior, cognition, perception, and social relationships of diverse species.
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