Singing ability is related to vocal emotion recognition: Evidence for shared sensorimotor processing across speech and music

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Abstract

The ability to recognize emotion in speech is a critical skill for social communication. Motivated by previous work that has shown that vocal emotion recognition accuracy varies by musical ability, the current study addressed this relationship using a behavioral measure of musical ability (i.e., singing) that relies on the same effector system used for vocal prosody production. In the current study, participants completed a musical production task that involved singing four-note novel melodies. To measure pitch perception, we used a simple pitch discrimination task in which participants indicated whether a target pitch was higher or lower than a comparison pitch. We also used self-report measures to address language and musical background. We report that singing ability, but not self-reported musical experience nor pitch discrimination ability, was a unique predictor of vocal emotion recognition accuracy. These results support a relationship between processes involved in vocal production and vocal perception, and suggest that sensorimotor processing of the vocal system is recruited for processing vocal prosody.

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Greenspon, E. B., & Montanaro, V. (2023). Singing ability is related to vocal emotion recognition: Evidence for shared sensorimotor processing across speech and music. Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 85(1), 234–243. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13414-022-02613-0

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