scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The acoustic features of human laughter

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Recording of naturally produced laugh bouts recorded from 97 young adults as they watched funny video clips revealed evident diversity in production modes, remarkable variability in fundamental frequency characteristics, and consistent lack of articulation effects in supralaryngeal filtering are of particular interest.
Abstract
Remarkably little is known about the acoustic features of laughter. Here, acoustic outcomes are reported for 1024 naturally produced laugh bouts recorded from 97 young adults as they watched funny video clips. Analyses focused on temporal features, production modes, source- and filter-related effects, and indexical cues to laugher sex and individual identity. Although a number of researchers have previously emphasized stereotypy in laughter, its acoustics were found now to be variable and complex. Among the variety of findings reported, evident diversity in production modes, remarkable variability in fundamental frequency characteristics, and consistent lack of articulation effects in supralaryngeal filtering are of particular interest. In addition, formant-related filtering effects were found to be disproportionately important as acoustic correlates of laugher sex and individual identity. These outcomes are examined in light of existing data concerning laugh acoustics, as well as a number of hypotheses and conjectures previously advanced about this species-typical vocal signal.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Learning Co-Occurrence of Laughter and Topics in Conversational Interactions

TL;DR: This paper describes experiments to learn laughter co-occurrences with dialogue contributions to First Encounter Dialogues where the interlocutors meet each other for the first time and where laughter mainly functions as a sign of politeness or relief of embarrassment.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Speech/laughter classification in meeting audio.

TL;DR: The results show that the proposed Pitch and Harmonic Frequency Scale (PHFS) based feature is robust and effective in segment level speech and laughter detection.
Dissertation

Exploration of the acoustic structure and contextual occurrence of affiliative vocalisations in red wolves (Canis rufus)

TL;DR: In this paper, the structure and nature of tonal vocalisations produced by red wolves were determined based on video recordings of captive wolves from a breeding facility, and five different types of vocalization types were identified based on unit composition: squeaks 48.4%, wuhs 19.3%, and three mixed vocalisations 21.9%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ingressive phonation conveys arousal in human nonverbal vocalizations

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors found that listeners judged vocalisations with attenuated ingressive syllables to be less emotionally intense compared to the original ones, presumably because listeners associate heavy breathing, imperfect vocal control, and continuous egressive-ingressive vocalising with the physiological state of high arousal.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Control Methods Used in a Study of the Vowels

TL;DR: Control methods used in the evaluation of effects of language and dialectal backgrounds and vocal and auditory characteristics of the individuals concerned in a vowel study program at Bell Telephone Laboratories are discussed.
Book

A course in phonetics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce articulatory phonetics phonology and phonetic transcription, including the Consonants of English English vowels and English words and sentences, as well as the international phonetic alphabet feature hierarchy performance exercises.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acoustic characteristics of American English vowels

TL;DR: Analysis of the formant data shows numerous differences between the present data and those of PB, both in terms of average frequencies of F1 and F2, and the degree of overlap among adjacent vowels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sound on the rebound: Bringing form and function back to the forefront in understanding nonhuman primate vocal signaling

TL;DR: This review examines some difficulties engendered by a linguistically inspired, meaning-based view of primate calls, specifically that vocalizations are arbitrarily structured vehicles for transmitting encoded referential information, and suggests two ways in which acoustic structure may be tied to simple, nonlinguistic functions in primate vocalizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subharmonics, biphonation, and deterministic chaos in mammal vocalization

TL;DR: It is suggested that a variety of nonlinear phenomena including subharmonics, biphonation, and deterministic chaos are normally occurring phonatory events in mammalian vocalizations.