Results 201 to 210 of about 3,228 (244)
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Aging and the Perception of Affective and Linguistic Prosody
Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2022Investigations of affective prosodic processing have demonstrated a decline with aging. It is unclear, however, whether this decline affects all or specific emotions. Also, little is known about the ability of syntactic resolution ambiguity with the use of prosody in aging.
Maria Martzoukou +2 more
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Exploring the prosody of affective speech
Proceedings of International Conference of Experimental Linguistics, 2022This paper introduces a research project on voice quality and affect expression. It explores affective prosody by investigating the relationship between voice source parameter changes and perceived affect. Firstly, it aims to examine the relative contribution of voice source shifts occurring globally across an utterance and shifts that are aligned to ...
Giovannini, Anna Maria +2 more
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Comprehension of affective and nonaffective prosody
Neurology, 1984We studied patients with damage of either the right (RHD) or left hemisphere (LHD) and control subjects to determine whether the RHD patients had a global or limited prosodic defect. Compared with LHD patients and controls, RHD subjects had decreased comprehension of emotional prosody.
K M, Heilman +3 more
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Affective prosody in children with Williams syndrome
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2007The aim of the current study was to investigate expressive affect in children with Williams syndrome (WS) in comparison to typically developing children in an experimental task and in spontaneous speech. Fourteen children with WS, 14 typically developing children matched to the WS group for receptive language (LA) and 15 typically developing children ...
Jane, Setter +3 more
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Impaired Perception of Affective Prosody in Schizophrenia
The Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 2006The authors aimed to explore schizophrenia patients' ability to perceive affective prosody. Specifically, certain emotions that may be more troublesome for patients and possible gender differences in prosody perception were assessed. Thirty six schizophrenia patients and 32 age-, education-, and gender-matched healthy comparison subjects assessed on an
Vasilis P, Bozikas +5 more
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Comprehension of affective prosody in multiple sclerosis
Multiple Sclerosis Journal, 2003Deficits in cognition have been repeatedly documented in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), but their ability to comprehend emotional information has received little study. Forty-seven patients with MS and 19 demographic controls received the comprehension portion of the A prosodia Battery, which is known to be sensitive to the impairments of ...
William W, Beatty +3 more
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The impacts of aging on the comprehension of affective prosody: A systematic review
Applied Neuropsychology: Adult, 2023Recent clinical reports have suggested a possible decline in the ability to understand emotions in speech (affective prosody comprehension) with aging. The present study aims to further examine the differences in performance between older and younger adults in terms of affective prosody comprehension.
Héloïse Baglione +3 more
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Affective prosody: Whence motherese
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2004Motherese is a form of affective prosody injected automatically into speech during caregiving solicitude. Affective prosody is the aspect of language that conveys emotion by changes in tone, rhythm, and emphasis during speech. It is a neocortical function that allows graded, highly varied vocal emotional expression.
Marilee Monnot +2 more
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Affective prosody in frontotemporal dementia
Neurology, 2017“It's not what you said; it's how you said it!” How many times have you said or heard that while interacting with a family member or colleague? It is clear that tone of voice (modulations in pitch, loudness, and rhythm of speech, together called prosody) conveys a great deal of intent and emotion in nearly every exchange.
Cristian E, Leyton, Argye E, Hillis
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Facial affect and affective prosody recognition in first-episode schizophrenia
Schizophrenia Research, 2001Individuals with schizophrenia experience problems in the perception of emotional material; however, the specificity, extent, and nature of the deficits are unclear. Facial affect and affective prosody recognition were examined in representative samples of individuals with first-episode psychosis, assessed as outpatients during the early recovery phase
J, Edwards +3 more
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