Visual vs. auditory emotion information : how language and culture affect our bias towards the different modalities

Chee Seng Chong, Jeesun Kim, Chris Davis

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperConference Paperpeer-review

    3 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This study investigated if familiarity with a language that an emotion is expressed in, affects how information from the different sensory modalities are weighed in auditory-visual (AV) processing. The rationale for this study is that visual information may drive multisensory perception of emotion when a person is unfamiliar with a language, and this visual dominance effect may be reduced when a person is able to understand and extract emotion information from the language. To test this, Cantonese, English and Malay speakers were presented spoken Cantonese and English emotion expressions (angry, happy, sad, disgust and surprise) in AO, VO or AV conditions. Response matrices were examined to see if patterns of responses changed as a function of whether the expressions were produced in their native or non-native language. Our results show that the visual dominance effect for Cantonese and Malay participants changed depending on the language an emotion was expressed in, while the English participants showed a strong visual dominance effect regardless of the language of expression.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationProceedings of the 1st Joint Conference on Facial Analysis, Animation and Auditory-Visual Speech Processing, FAAVSP 2015, 11–13 September 2015, Vienna, Austria
    PublisherInternational Speech Communication Association
    Pages46-51
    Number of pages6
    Publication statusPublished - 2015
    EventJoint Conference on Facial Analysis_Animation and Auditory-Visual Speech Processing -
    Duration: 11 Sept 2015 → …

    Conference

    ConferenceJoint Conference on Facial Analysis_Animation and Auditory-Visual Speech Processing
    Period11/09/15 → …

    Keywords

    • Cantonese dialects
    • English language
    • Malay language
    • auditory perception
    • emotive (linguistics)
    • speech perception
    • visual perception

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