Table 4 from Humans recognize emotional arousal in vocalizations across all classes of terrestrial vertebrates: evidence for acoustic universals
Piera Filippi
Jenna V. Congdon
John Hoang
Daniel L. Bowling
Stephan A. Reber
Andrius Pašukonis
Marisa Hoeschele
Sebastian Ocklenburg
Bart de Boer
Christopher B. Sturdy
Albert Newen
Onur Gunturkun
10.6084/m9.figshare.5203144.v1
https://rs.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Table_4_from_Humans_recognize_emotional_arousal_in_vocalizations_across_all_classes_of_terrestrial_vertebrates_evidence_for_acoustic_universals/5203144
(A) Values of the GLMMs computed separately for each animal species. For each species included in our stimuli set, we assessed acoustic predictors of humans’ ability to identify the vocalizations expressing higher levels of arousal. Bold type indicate p ≤0.05; degrees of freedom = 1 for all fixed factors. (B) Outcome of AICc ranking for GLMMs computed within each animal species. ∆AICc is the difference in AICc between each model and the best model. The Akaike's weights indicates the relative support that a given model has from the data, compared to other candidate models. Bold type indicates models with the highest power to explain variation in the dependent variable, based on lowest AICc.
2017-07-13 09:49:04
emotional arousal
language evolution
vocal communication
cross-species communication
acoustic universals
emotional prosody