Recognizing liars from the sound of their voice? : vimarsana

Recognizing liars from the sound of their voice?


 E-Mail
Faster speech rate, greater intensity in the middle of the word, and falling pitch at the end of the word: that is the prosody[1] to adopt if one wants to come across as reliable and honest to one's listeners. Scientists from the Science and Technology for Music and Sound laboratory (CNRS/Ircam/Sorbonne Université/Ministère de la Culture)[2] and the Perceptual Systems Laboratory (CNRS/ENS PSL) have conducted a series of experiments[3] to understand how we decide, based on the voice, whether a speaker is honest and confident, or on the contrary dishonest and uncertain. They have also shown that this signature was perceived similarly in a number of languages (French, English, Spanish), and that it is registered "automatically" by the brain: even when participants were not judging the speaker's certainty or honesty, this characteristic sound impacted how they memorized the words. Prosody consequently conveys information on the truth-value or certainty of a proposition. Scientists are now trying to understand how speakers produce such prosody based on their intentions. This research was published on 8 February in

Related Keywords

France , Spain , Spanish , French , Louise Goupil , Jean Julien Aucouturier , Alexiane Agullo , Nature Communications , Technology For Music , University Of East London , Perceptual Systems Laboratory , Sorbonne Universit , Julien Aucouturier , Language Linguistics Speech , Technology Engineering Computer Science , Multimedia Networking Interface Design , பிரான்ஸ் , ஸ்பெயின் , ஸ்பானிஷ் , பிரஞ்சு , லூயிஸ் கூபில் , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் , தொழில்நுட்பம் க்கு இசை , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கிழக்கு லண்டன் , புலனுணர்வு அமைப்புகள் ஆய்வகம் , மொழி மொழியியல் பேச்சு , தொழில்நுட்பம் பொறியியல் கணினி அறிவியல் , மல்டிமீடியா நெட்வொர்க்கிங் இடைமுகம் வடிவமைப்பு ,

© 2025 Vimarsana