TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross cultural differences in arousal and valence perceptions of voice quality
AU - Erickson, Donna
AU - Kawahara, Shigeto
AU - Rilliard, Albert
AU - Hayashi, Ryoko
AU - Sadanobu, Toshiyuki
AU - Li, Yongwei
AU - Daikuhara, Hayato
AU - de Moraes, João
AU - Obert, Kerrie
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was partially supported by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (A), 15H02605 and 23242023 to Toshiyuki Sadanobu, and by research money granted by the Keio University to Shigeto Kawahara.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 International Speech Communications Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Voice quality differences [1] can convey different attitudes and emotions [2], with speakers of different languages showing different sensitivities to voice qualities, e.g., [3, 4, 5]. It remains to be explored, however, precisely which acoustic properties are perceptually associated with what emotional meanings, and whether such perceptual mappings hold universally or differ across languages. This paper offers a first step addressing these issues. Building upon the previous findings that speakers of different languages demonstrate different sensitivities to voice quality differences, the study examines particularly how the perceptions of arousal and valence are affected by different voice qualities. The current experiment reveals that speakers of the three language groups share similar ratings of arousal in association with breathy voices. Yet the valence ratings vary among the groups: Japanese and Mandarin listeners rate voices with high F0 and small OQ with positivity, whereas Brazilian Portuguese rate voices with low F0 and larger OQ with positivity. The findings of this study have applications for second language teaching, and carry over to the worlds of business, politics, and advertisement; in general, this type of research may have a potential to be useful for improving communication in cross-cultural inter-personal relationships.
AB - Voice quality differences [1] can convey different attitudes and emotions [2], with speakers of different languages showing different sensitivities to voice qualities, e.g., [3, 4, 5]. It remains to be explored, however, precisely which acoustic properties are perceptually associated with what emotional meanings, and whether such perceptual mappings hold universally or differ across languages. This paper offers a first step addressing these issues. Building upon the previous findings that speakers of different languages demonstrate different sensitivities to voice quality differences, the study examines particularly how the perceptions of arousal and valence are affected by different voice qualities. The current experiment reveals that speakers of the three language groups share similar ratings of arousal in association with breathy voices. Yet the valence ratings vary among the groups: Japanese and Mandarin listeners rate voices with high F0 and small OQ with positivity, whereas Brazilian Portuguese rate voices with low F0 and larger OQ with positivity. The findings of this study have applications for second language teaching, and carry over to the worlds of business, politics, and advertisement; in general, this type of research may have a potential to be useful for improving communication in cross-cultural inter-personal relationships.
KW - Acoustics
KW - Arousal
KW - Cross-cultural perception
KW - Valence
KW - Voice quality
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U2 - 10.21437/SpeechProsody.2020-147
DO - 10.21437/SpeechProsody.2020-147
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85093896552
SN - 2333-2042
VL - 2020-May
SP - 720
EP - 724
JO - Proceedings of the International Conference on Speech Prosody
JF - Proceedings of the International Conference on Speech Prosody
T2 - 10th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2020
Y2 - 25 May 2020 through 28 May 2020
ER -