Abstract

Emotional expressions provide strong signals in social interactions and can function as emotion inducers in a perceiver. Although speech provides one of the most important channels for human communication, its physiological correlates, such as activations of the autonomous nervous system (ANS) while listening to spoken utterances, have received far less attention than in other domains of emotion processing. Our study aimed at filling this gap by investigating autonomic activation in response to spoken utterances that were embedded into larger semantic contexts. Emotional salience was manipulated by providing information on alleged speaker similarity. We compared these autonomic responses to activations triggered by affective sounds, such as exploding bombs, and applause. These sounds had been rated and validated as being either positive, negative, or neutral. As physiological markers of ANS activity, we recorded skin conductance responses (SCRs) and changes of pupil size while participants classified both prosodic and sound stimuli according to their hedonic valence. As expected, affective sounds elicited increased arousal in the receiver, as reflected in increased SCR and pupil size. In contrast, SCRs to angry and joyful prosodic expressions did not differ from responses to neutral ones. Pupil size, however, was modulated by affective prosodic utterances, with increased dilations for angry and joyful compared to neutral prosody, although the similarity manipulation had no effect. These results indicate that cues provided by emotional prosody in spoken semantically neutral utterances might be too subtle to trigger SCR, although variation in pupil size indicated the salience of stimulus variation. Our findings further demonstrate a functional dissociation between pupil dilation and skin conductance that presumably origins from their differential innervation.

Highlights

  • Emotional expressions conveyed by face, voice and in body gestures are strong social signals and might serve as emotion-elicitors in a spectator or listener

  • The present study aimed at investigating the elicitation of arousal-related autonomic responses to emotional prosody of spoken utterances in comparison to affective sounds during explicit emotion decisions

  • Listening to angry and joyful prosodic utterances led to increased pupil dilations but not to amplified skin conductance responses (SCRs)

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Summary

Introduction

Emotional expressions conveyed by face, voice and in body gestures are strong social signals and might serve as emotion-elicitors in a spectator or listener. Situations that are of relevance for someone’s wellbeing or future prospects, such as meeting an aggressor on the street, possess an emotional meaning that has the power to trigger emotions in the beholder. While autonomic responses to affective pictures and sounds have been reliably demonstrated (e.g., Bradley et al, 2001a), only little is known about ANS responses to emotional expressions, in particular with regard to spoken language. Emotional expressions in the voice, are of special relevance considering that speech might be the most important communication channel in humans. Our study had two main aims; first, we investigated autonomic activation in response to spoken utterances of neutral semantic content but varying in their emotional prosody, and second, we compared these responses to those triggered by another auditory domain, namely affective sounds

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