Literature DB >> 15032991

Recognition of affective prosody: continuous wavelet measures of event-related brain potentials to emotional exclamations.

Vladimir Bostanov1, Boris Kotchoubey.   

Abstract

The affective state of a speaker can be identified from the prosody of his or her speech. Voice quality is the most important prosodic cue for emotion recognition from short verbal utterances and nonverbal exclamations, the latter conveying pure emotion, void of all semantic meaning. We adopted two context violation paradigms-oddball and priming-to study the event-related brain potentials (ERP) reflecting this recognition process. We found a negative wave, the N300, in the ERPs to contextually incongruous exclamations, and interpreted this component as analogous to the well-known N400 response to semantically inappropriate words. The N300 appears to be a real-time psychophysiological measure of spontaneous emotion recognition from vocal cues, which could prove a useful tool for the examination of affective-prosody comprehension. In addition, we developed a new ERP component detection and estimation method that is based on the continuous wavelet transform (CWT), does not rely on visual inspection of the waveforms, and yields larger statistical difference effects than classical methods.

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15032991     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.2003.00142.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychophysiology        ISSN: 0048-5772            Impact factor:   4.016


  24 in total

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Authors:  Silke Paulmann; Marc D Pell
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 3.282

2.  Neural correlates of cross-domain affective priming.

Authors:  Qin Zhang; Xiaohua Li; Brian T Gold; Yang Jiang
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2010-03-16       Impact factor: 3.252

3.  Electrophysiological correlates of visual affective priming.

Authors:  Qin Zhang; Adam Lawson; Chunyan Guo; Yang Jiang
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4.  Electrophysiological evidence of different interpretative strategies in irony comprehension.

Authors:  Carlos Cornejol; Franco Simonetti; Nerea Aldunate; Agustín Ibáñez; Vladimir López; Lucía Melloni
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2007-11

5.  Double dissociation between rules and memory in music: an event-related potential study.

Authors:  Robbin A Miranda; Michael T Ullman
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2007-08-08       Impact factor: 6.556

6.  Recognition of affective prosody in brain-damaged patients and healthy controls: a neurophysiological study using EEG and whole-head MEG.

Authors:  Boris Kotchoubey; Jochen Kaiser; Vladimir Bostanov; Werner Lutzenberger; Niels Birbaumer
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 3.282

7.  Hearing others' pain: neural activity related to empathy.

Authors:  Simone Lang; Tao Yu; Alexandra Markl; Friedemann Müller; Boris Kotchoubey
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 3.282

8.  Musical chords and emotion: major and minor triads are processed for emotion.

Authors:  David Radford Bakker; Frances Heritage Martin
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 3.282

9.  Hearing feelings: affective categorization of music and speech in alexithymia, an ERP study.

Authors:  Katharina Sophia Goerlich; Jurriaan Witteman; André Aleman; Sander Martens
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-05-09       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Emotional speech processing at the intersection of prosody and semantics.

Authors:  Rachel Schwartz; Marc D Pell
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-10-31       Impact factor: 3.240

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