Is Age-related Decline in Vocal Emotion Identification an Artefact of Labelling Cognitions?
Rachel Mitchell and
Rachel Kingston
International Journal of Psychological Studies, 2011, vol. 3, issue 2, 156
Abstract:
Evidence has emerged that older adults find it more difficult to interpret prosodic emotions than younger adults.However, typical tasks involve labelling-related cognitions over and above emotion perception per se. Accordingly, we aimed to determine if age-related difficulty in prosodic emotion labelling extended to discrimination, which is more closely related to emotion perception per se. For this purpose, 45 younger adults(mean age 20 years, 2 males/43 females) and 45 older adults (mean age 71 years, 16 males/29 females) were recruited. In one task, participants heard pairs of sentences and were asked to indicate whether they were spoken with the same emotional intonational or not. In a second task, they heard sentences with intonation conveying a question or statement, and indicated whether the non-emotional intonation patterns matched or not. Older adults’ performance consistently fell below that of younger adults. Older adults may have a generic prosodic decoding deficit, regardless of the end function of the prosody.
Date: 2011
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ibn:ijpsjl:v:3:y:2011:i:2:p:156
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