The effect of familiarity on within-person age judgements from voices.
Autor: | Lavan N; Department of Experimental and Biological Psychology, School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, UK.; Department of Speech, Hearing and Phonetic Sciences, University College London, UK. |
---|---|
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Zdroj: | British journal of psychology (London, England : 1953) [Br J Psychol] 2022 Feb; Vol. 113 (1), pp. 287-299. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Aug 20. |
DOI: | 10.1111/bjop.12526 |
Abstrakt: | Listeners can perceive a person's age from their voice with above chance accuracy. Studies have usually established this by asking listeners to directly estimate the age of unfamiliar voices. The recordings used mostly include cross-sectional samples of voices, including people of different ages to cover the age range of interest. Such cross-sectional samples likely include not only cues to age in the sound of the voice but also socio-phonetic cues, encoded in how a person speaks. How age perpcetion accuracy is affected when minimizing socio-phonetic cues by sampling the same voice at different time points remains largely unknown. Similarly, with the voices in age perception studies being usually unfamiliar to listeners, it is unclear how familiarity with a voice affects age perception. We asked listeners who were either familiar or unfamiliar with a set of four voices to complete an age discrimination task: listeners heard two recordings of the same person's voice, recorded 15 years apart, and were asked to indicate in which recording the person was younger. Accuracy for both familiar and unfamiliar listeners was above chance. While familiarity advantages were apparent, accuracy was not particularly high: familiar and unfamiliar listeners were correct for 68.2% and 62.7% of trials, respectively (chance = 50%). Familiarity furthermore interacted with the voices included. Overall, our findings indicate that age perception from voices is not a trivial task at all times - even when listeners are familiar with a voice. We discuss our findings in the light of how reliable voice may be as a signal for age. (© 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.) |
Databáze: | MEDLINE |
Externí odkaz: | |
Nepřihlášeným uživatelům se plný text nezobrazuje | K zobrazení výsledku je třeba se přihlásit. |