Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

There's more to emotion than meets the eye: A processing bias for neutral content in the domain of emotional prosody

2009; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 24; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/02699930903247492

ISSN

1464-0600

Autores

Lauren Cornew, Leslie J. Carver, Tracy Love,

Tópico(s)

Visual perception and processing mechanisms

Resumo

Research on emotion processing in the visual modality suggests a processing advantage for emotionally salient stimuli, even at early sensory stages; however, results concerning the auditory correlates are inconsistent. We present two experiments that employed a gating paradigm to investigate emotional prosody. In Experiment 1, participants heard successively building segments of Jabberwocky "sentences" spoken with happy, angry, or neutral intonation. After each segment, participants indicated the emotion conveyed and rated their confidence in their decision. Participants in Experiment 2 also heard Jabberwocky "sentences" in successive increments, with half discriminating happy from neutral prosody, and half discriminating angry from neutral prosody. Participants in both experiments identified neutral prosody more rapidly and accurately than happy or angry prosody. Confidence ratings were greater for neutral sentences, and error patterns also indicated a bias for recognising neutral prosody. Taken together, results suggest that enhanced processing of emotional content may be constrained by stimulus modality.

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