Stirling, John D., Cavill, John and Wilkinson, Andrew (2000) Dichotically presented emotionally intoned words produce laterality differences as a function of localisation task. brain and cognition, 5 (4). pp. 363-371. ISSN 1357-650X
File not available for download.Abstract
Two-syllable words (burden; furrow; mantle; ration) each spoken in happy, angry, sad, and neutral tones of voice were dichotically paired. For each presented wordpair, subjects were asked to localise ("left"; "right") or reject the presence of one pre-specified word on one block of trials and one pre-specified emotional tone on a second trial block. Right ear advantages (REAs) indicated by a superior hit rate averaging 9.6% were found for all words. Left ear advantages (LEAs) averaging 15.2% were obtained for emotional intonation, with additional evidence of differences between emotion categories. Results are discussed in terms of complementary hemispheric roles for linguistic and prosodic analysis.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.