![]() ![]() In summary, results showed that listeners may infer several aspects of emotion-eliciting situations from the non-verbal aspects of a speaker’s voice. The appraisal ratings were further correlated with a variety of acoustic measures in exploratory analyses, and inspection of the acoustic profiles suggested similarity across groups. However, some differences between Australian and Indian participants were also evident, mainly for ratings of norm compatibility. Few group differences emerged, which suggests that the perceived appraisal profiles are largely universal. Bayesian analyses showed that the perceived appraisal profiles for the vocally expressed emotions were generally consistent with predictions based on appraisal theories. aspects of the emotioneliciting situation from the vocal expressions, described in terms of appraisal dimensions (novelty, intrinsic pleasantness, goal conduciveness, urgency, power and norm compatibility). ![]() In a balanced design, participants from Australia and India then inferred. Professional actors from Australia and India vocally portrayed different emotions (anger, fear, happiness, pride, relief, sadness, serenity and shame) by enacting emotioneliciting situations. This study explored the perception of emotion appraisal dimensions on the basis of speech prosody in a cross-cultural setting. ![]()
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