Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing

Previous research suggests that emotional prosody processing is a highly rapid and complex process. In particular, it has been shown that different basic emotions can be differentiated in an early event-related brain potential (ERP) component, the P200. Often, the P200 is followed by later long last...

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Main Authors: Silke ePaulmann, Martin eBleichner, Sonja A E Kotz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
LPC
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00345/full
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spelling doaj-2f25ecf3538f44098d2cc8e32b3536692020-11-24T22:56:51ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782013-06-01410.3389/fpsyg.2013.0034552797Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processingSilke ePaulmann0Martin eBleichner1Sonja A E Kotz2Sonja A E Kotz3University of EssexRudolf Magnus Institute of NeuroscienceMax Planck InstituteUniversity of ManchesterPrevious research suggests that emotional prosody processing is a highly rapid and complex process. In particular, it has been shown that different basic emotions can be differentiated in an early event-related brain potential (ERP) component, the P200. Often, the P200 is followed by later long lasting ERPs such as the late positive complex (LPC). The current experiment set out to explore in how far emotionality and arousal can modulate these previously reported ERP components. In addition, we also investigated the influence of task demands (implicit vs. explicit evaluation of stimuli). Participants listened to pseudo-sentences (sentences with no lexical content) spoken in six different emotions or in a neutral tone of voice while they either rated the arousal level of the speaker or their own arousal level. Results confirm that different emotional intonations can first be differentiated in the P200 component, reflecting a first emotional encoding of the stimulus possibly including a valence tagging process. A marginal significant arousal effect was also found in this time-window with high arousing stimuli eliciting a stronger P200 than low arousing stimuli. The P200 component was followed by a long lasting positive ERP between 400 and 750 ms. In this late time-window, both emotion and arousal effects were found. No effects of task were observed in either time-window. Taken together, results suggest that emotion relevant details are robustly decoded during early processing and late processing stages while arousal information is only reliably taken into consideration at a later stage of processing.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00345/fullArousalemotionERPsProsodyP200LPC
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silke ePaulmann
Martin eBleichner
Sonja A E Kotz
Sonja A E Kotz
spellingShingle Silke ePaulmann
Martin eBleichner
Sonja A E Kotz
Sonja A E Kotz
Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
Frontiers in Psychology
Arousal
emotion
ERPs
Prosody
P200
LPC
author_facet Silke ePaulmann
Martin eBleichner
Sonja A E Kotz
Sonja A E Kotz
author_sort Silke ePaulmann
title Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
title_short Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
title_full Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
title_fullStr Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
title_full_unstemmed Valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
title_sort valence, arousal, and task effects in emotional prosody processing
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2013-06-01
description Previous research suggests that emotional prosody processing is a highly rapid and complex process. In particular, it has been shown that different basic emotions can be differentiated in an early event-related brain potential (ERP) component, the P200. Often, the P200 is followed by later long lasting ERPs such as the late positive complex (LPC). The current experiment set out to explore in how far emotionality and arousal can modulate these previously reported ERP components. In addition, we also investigated the influence of task demands (implicit vs. explicit evaluation of stimuli). Participants listened to pseudo-sentences (sentences with no lexical content) spoken in six different emotions or in a neutral tone of voice while they either rated the arousal level of the speaker or their own arousal level. Results confirm that different emotional intonations can first be differentiated in the P200 component, reflecting a first emotional encoding of the stimulus possibly including a valence tagging process. A marginal significant arousal effect was also found in this time-window with high arousing stimuli eliciting a stronger P200 than low arousing stimuli. The P200 component was followed by a long lasting positive ERP between 400 and 750 ms. In this late time-window, both emotion and arousal effects were found. No effects of task were observed in either time-window. Taken together, results suggest that emotion relevant details are robustly decoded during early processing and late processing stages while arousal information is only reliably taken into consideration at a later stage of processing.
topic Arousal
emotion
ERPs
Prosody
P200
LPC
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00345/full
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