Does Singing a Low-Pitch Tone Make You Look Angrier?

Peter Ahrendt, Christian Camoro Bach, Sofia Dahl

Research output: Contribution to book/anthology/report/conference proceedingArticle in proceedingResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

While many studies have shown that auditory and visual information influence each other, the link between some intermodal associations are less clear. We here replicate and extend an earlier experiment with ratings of pictures of people singing high and low-pitched tones.
To this aim, we video recorded 19 participants singing high and low pitches and combined these into picture pairs. In a two-alternative forced choice test, two groups of six assessors were then asked to view the 19 picture pairs and select the "friendlier", and "angrier" expression respectively. The result is that assessors chose the high-pitch picture when they were asked to rate "friendlier" expression. Asking about "angrier" expression resulted in choosing the low-pitch picture. A non significant positive correlation between sung pitch ranges from every participant to the number of chosen high-pitch resp. low-pitch pictures was found.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 14th Sound and Music Computing Conference 2017
PublisherAalto University
Publication date2017
Pages181-187
ISBN (Print)978-952-60-3729-5
ISBN (Electronic) ISSN 2518-3672
Publication statusPublished - 2017
Event14th Sound & Music Computing Conference - Aalto university, Espoo, Finland
Duration: 5 Jul 20178 Jul 2017
http://smc2017.aalto.fi/index.html

Conference

Conference14th Sound & Music Computing Conference
LocationAalto university
Country/TerritoryFinland
CityEspoo
Period05/07/201708/07/2017
Internet address
SeriesProceedings of the Sound and Music Computing Conference
ISSN2518-3672

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