Effects of prosodic emotional intensity on activation of associative auditory cortex
- 27 February 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in NeuroReport
- Vol. 17 (3) , 249-253
- https://doi.org/10.1097/01.wnr.0000199466.32036.5d
Abstract
Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to investigate hemodynamic responses to adjectives pronounced in happy and angry intonations of varying emotional intensity. In separate sessions, participants judged the emotional valence of either intonation or semantics. To disentangle effects of emotional prosodic intensity from confounding acoustic parameters, mean and variability of volume and fundamental frequency of each stimulus were included as nuisance variables in the statistical models. A linear dependency between hemodynamic responses and emotional intensity of happy and angry intonations was found in the bilateral superior temporal sulcus during both tasks, indicating that increases of hemodynamic responses in this region are elicited by both positive and negative prosody independent of low-level acoustic properties and task instructions.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- The voices of wrath: brain responses to angry prosody in meaningless speechNature Neuroscience, 2005
- A preferential increase in the extrastriate response to signals of dangerNeuroImage, 2003
- Emotional valence modulates activity in the posterior fusiform gyrus and inferior medial prefrontal cortex in social perceptionNeuroImage, 2003
- Task instructions modulate neural responses to fearful facial expressionsBiological Psychiatry, 2003
- Neural systems for recognizing emotionCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 2002
- Effects of Attention and Emotion on Face Processing in the Human Brain: An Event-Related fMRI StudyPublished by Elsevier ,2001
- Voice-selective areas in human auditory cortexNature, 2000
- The Fusiform Face Area: A Module in Human Extrastriate Cortex Specialized for Face PerceptionJournal of Neuroscience, 1997
- Measuring emotion: The self-assessment manikin and the semantic differentialJournal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 1994
- The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh inventoryNeuropsychologia, 1971