Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

The Sound of Emotion: Pinpointing Emotional Voice Processing via Frequency Tagging EEG

Version 1 : Received: 19 December 2022 / Approved: 21 December 2022 / Online: 21 December 2022 (06:07:12 CET)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Vos, S.; Collignon, O.; Boets, B. The Sound of Emotion: Pinpointing Emotional Voice Processing Via Frequency Tagging EEG. Brain Sci. 2023, 13, 162. Vos, S.; Collignon, O.; Boets, B. The Sound of Emotion: Pinpointing Emotional Voice Processing Via Frequency Tagging EEG. Brain Sci. 2023, 13, 162.

Abstract

Successfully engaging in social communication requires efficient processing of subtle socio-communicative cues. Voices convey a wealth of social information, such as gender, identity and the emotional state of the speaker. We tested whether our brain can systematically and automatically differentiate and track a periodic stream of emotional utterances among a series of neutral vocal utterances. We recorded frequency-tagged EEG responses of 20 neurotypical male adults while presenting streams of neutral utterances at 4 Hz base rate, interleaved with emotional utterances every third stimulus, hence at 1.333 Hz oddball frequency. Four emotions (happy, sad, angry, and fear) were presented as different conditions in different streams. To control the impact of low-level acoustic cues, we maximized variability among the stimuli and included a control condition with scrambled utterances. This scrambling preserves low-level acoustic characteristics but ensures that the emotional character is no longer recognizable. Results revealed significant oddball EEG responses for all conditions, indicating that every emotion category can be discriminated from the neutral stimuli, and every emotional oddball response was significantly higher than the response for the scrambled utterances. These findings demonstrate that emotion discrimination is fast, automatic, and is not merely driven by low-level perceptual features.

Keywords

emotion discrimination; voice; frequency-tagging; EEG

Subject

Social Sciences, Behavior Sciences

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