STMS UMR 9912 (CNRS/IRCAM/SU), Paris, France.
University of East London, London, UK.
Nat Commun. 2021 Feb 8;12(1):861. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-20649-4.
The success of human cooperation crucially depends on mechanisms enabling individuals to detect unreliability in their conspecifics. Yet, how such epistemic vigilance is achieved from naturalistic sensory inputs remains unclear. Here we show that listeners' perceptions of the certainty and honesty of other speakers from their speech are based on a common prosodic signature. Using a data-driven method, we separately decode the prosodic features driving listeners' perceptions of a speaker's certainty and honesty across pitch, duration and loudness. We find that these two kinds of judgments rely on a common prosodic signature that is perceived independently from individuals' conceptual knowledge and native language. Finally, we show that listeners extract this prosodic signature automatically, and that this impacts the way they memorize spoken words. These findings shed light on a unique auditory adaptation that enables human listeners to quickly detect and react to unreliability during linguistic interactions.
人类合作的成功在很大程度上取决于使个体能够检测到同类不可靠性的机制。然而,从自然主义的感官输入中如何实现这种认知警觉仍然不清楚。在这里,我们表明,听众对其他说话者说话的确定性和诚实性的感知是基于一个共同的韵律特征。我们使用一种数据驱动的方法,分别解码驱动听众对说话者的确定性和诚实性的感知的韵律特征,跨越音高、时长和响度。我们发现,这两种判断依赖于一种共同的韵律特征,这种特征是独立于个人的概念知识和母语感知的。最后,我们表明,听众自动提取这种韵律特征,这会影响他们记忆口语单词的方式。这些发现揭示了一种独特的听觉适应,使人类听众能够在语言交流中快速检测到并对不可靠性做出反应。