Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Cognition. 2010 Nov;117(2):217-23. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2010.08.008.
Previous research has demonstrated perceptual aftereffects for emotionally expressive faces, but the extent to which they can also be obtained in a different modality is unknown. In two experiments we show for the first time that adaptation to affective, non-linguistic vocalisations elicits significant auditory aftereffects. Adaptation to angry vocalisations caused voices drawn from an anger-fear morphed continuum to be perceived as less angry and more fearful, while adaptation to fearful vocalisations elicited opposite aftereffects (Experiment 1). We then tested the link between these aftereffects and the underlying acoustics by using caricatured adaptors. Although caricatures exaggerated the acoustical and affective properties of the vocalisations, the caricatured adaptors resulted in aftereffects which were comparable to those obtained with natural vocalisations (Experiment 2). Our findings suggest that these aftereffects cannot be solely explained by low-level adaptation to acoustical characteristics of the adaptors but are likely to depend on higher-level adaptation of neural representations of vocal affect.
先前的研究已经证明了情感表达面孔的知觉后效,但它们在不同模态中是否也能产生还不得而知。在两项实验中,我们首次表明,对情感的、非语言的发声的适应会引起显著的听觉后效。对愤怒的发声的适应会导致从愤怒-恐惧连续体中提取的声音被感知为不那么愤怒和更恐惧,而对恐惧的发声的适应则会产生相反的后效(实验 1)。然后,我们通过使用漫画适应器来测试这些后效与潜在声学之间的联系。尽管漫画夸张了发声的声学和情感特性,但漫画适应器产生的后效与使用自然发声获得的后效相当(实验 2)。我们的发现表明,这些后效不能仅仅通过对适应器的声学特征的低级适应来解释,而可能依赖于发声情感的神经表示的高级适应。