Did you or I say pretty, rude or brief? An ERP study of the effects of speaker's identity on emotional word processing.

Brain Lang

Clinical Neuroscience Division, Laboratory of Neuroscience, VA Boston Healthcare System-Brockton Division, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Brockton, MA, United States.

Published: February 2016

During speech comprehension, multiple cues need to be integrated at a millisecond speed, including semantic information, as well as voice identity and affect cues. A processing advantage has been demonstrated for self-related stimuli when compared with non-self stimuli, and for emotional relative to neutral stimuli. However, very few studies investigated self-other speech discrimination and, in particular, how emotional valence and voice identity interactively modulate speech processing. In the present study we probed how the processing of words' semantic valence is modulated by speaker's identity (self vs. non-self voice). Sixteen healthy subjects listened to 420 prerecorded adjectives differing in voice identity (self vs. non-self) and semantic valence (neutral, positive and negative), while electroencephalographic data were recorded. Participants were instructed to decide whether the speech they heard was their own (self-speech condition), someone else's (non-self speech), or if they were unsure. The ERP results demonstrated interactive effects of speaker's identity and emotional valence on both early (N1, P2) and late (Late Positive Potential - LPP) processing stages: compared with non-self speech, self-speech with neutral valence elicited more negative N1 amplitude, self-speech with positive valence elicited more positive P2 amplitude, and self-speech with both positive and negative valence elicited more positive LPP. ERP differences between self and non-self speech occurred in spite of similar accuracy in the recognition of both types of stimuli. Together, these findings suggest that emotion and speaker's identity interact during speech processing, in line with observations of partially dependent processing of speech and speaker information.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bandl.2015.12.003DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

speaker's identity
16
voice identity
12
non-self speech
12
valence elicited
12
speech
9
effects speaker's
8
identity emotional
8
processing speech
8
compared non-self
8
emotional valence
8

Similar Publications

Robust text-dependent speaker verification system using gender aware Siamese-Triplet Deep Neural Network.

Network

December 2024

Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, Dronacharya Group of Institutions, Greater Noida, UP, India.

Speaker verification in text-dependent scenarios is critical for high-security applications but faces challenges such as voice quality variations, linguistic diversity, and gender-related pitch differences, which affect authentication accuracy. This paper introduces a Gender-Aware Siamese-Triplet Network-Deep Neural Network (ST-DNN) architecture to address these challenges. The Gender-Aware Network utilizes Convolutional 2D layers with ReLU activation for initial feature extraction, followed by multi-fusion dense skip connections and batch normalization to integrate features across different depths, enhancing discrimination between male and female speakers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

EXPRESS: Top-down and emotional attention in blind and sighted individuals.

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)

December 2024

University of Lincoln, School of Psychology, College of Health and Science, Lincoln, United Kingdom.

There is evidence that congenitally blind individuals possess superior auditory perceptual skills compared to sighted people. However, relatively little is known about the auditory-specific cortical correlates of spatial attention in the blind and how task-irrelevant emotional stimulus features could further modulate such neural processes. This study tested blind and sighted participants in a challenging auditory discrimination task.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Linguistic accommodation refers to the process of adjusting one's language, speech, or communication style to match or adapt to that of others in a social interaction. It is known to be vital to effective health communication. Despite this evidence, there is little scientific guidance on how to design linguistically adapted health behavior interventions for diverse English-speaking populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Selective IgM deficiency (SIgMD) has recently been included in the inborn errors of immunity classification. SIgMD has conflicting diagnostic criteria and diverse clinical and immunological findings. We aimed to assess the clinical and laboratory profiles of patients with SIgMD and to compare the data of patients diagnosed using two inclusion criteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The origin of human CD20 T cells: a stolen identity?

Front Immunol

December 2024

The Danish Multiple Sclerosis Center, Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Glostrup, Denmark.

Human T cells expressing CD20 play an important role in the defense against virus and cancer and are central in the pathogenesis of both malignancies and various autoimmune disorders. Therapeutic modulation of CD20 T cells and the CD20 expression level is therefore of significant interest. In rodents, CD20 on T cells is likely the product of an active transfer of CD20 from a donor B cell interacting with a recipient T cell in a process termed trogocytosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!