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Regularity in speech rhythm as a social coalition signal

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Regularity in speech rhythm as a social2019.pdf (705.3Kb)
Date
2019
Author
Polyanskaya, Leona
Samuel, Arthur G.
Ordin, Mikhail
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Polyanskaya, L. , Samuel, A. G. and Ordin, M. (2019), Regularity in speech rhythm as a social coalition signal. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci., 1453: 153-165. doi:10.1111/nyas.14193
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10810/35646
Abstract
Regular rhythm facilitates audiomotor entrainment and synchronization in motor behavior and vocalizations between individuals. As rhythm entrainment between interacting agents is correlated with higher levels of cooperation and prosocial affiliative behavior, humans can potentiallymap regular speech rhythmonto higher cooperation and friendliness between interacting individuals.We tested this hypothesis at two rhythmic levels: pulse (recurrent acoustic events) and meter (hierarchical structuring of pulses based on their relative salience).We asked the listeners to make judgments of the hostile or collaborative attitude of two interacting agents who exhibit either regular or irregular pulse (Experiment 1) or meter (Experiment 2). The results confirmed a link between the perception of social affiliation and rhythmicity: evenly distributed pulses (vowel onsets) and consistent grouping of pulses into recurrent hierarchical patterns are more likely to be perceived as cooperation signals. People are more sensitive to regularity at the level of pulse than at the level of meter, and they are more confident when they associate cooperation with isochrony in pulse. The evolutionary origin of this faculty is possibly the need to transmit and perceive coalition information in social groups of human ancestors. We discuss the implications of these findings for the emergence of speech in humans.
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