Publication | Open Access
Emotional Arousal Predicts Voting on the U.S. Supreme Court
59
Citations
10
References
2018
Year
Speech SciencesAffective VariableAffective NeurosciencePolitical BehaviorRhetoricCommunicationU.s. Supreme CourtPsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseOral ArgumentsBiasProsody (Film Studies)Political CommunicationCase LawVocal PitchAffect PerceptionHealth SciencesSpeech CommunicationVoiceConstitutional LitigationParalinguisticsSpeech PerceptionJusticeEmotionEmotion RecognitionPublic Debate
Do judges telegraph their preferences during oral arguments? Using the U.S. Supreme Court as our example, we demonstrate that Justices implicitly reveal their leanings during oral arguments, even before arguments and deliberations have concluded. Specifically, we extract the emotional content of over 3,000 hours of audio recordings spanning 30 years of oral arguments before the Court. We then use the level of emotional arousal, as measured by vocal pitch, in each of the Justices’ voices during these arguments to accurately predict many of their eventual votes on these cases. Our approach yields predictions that are statistically and practically significant and robust to including a range of controls; in turn, this suggests that subconscious vocal inflections carry information that legal, political, and textual information do not.
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