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Effects of pitch and speech rate on personal attributions.
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Citations
22
References
1979
Year
Personal AttributionsAcoustic ManipulationsOral CommunicationInterpersonal CommunicationSpeech ProductionSocial PsychologyArtsScales.the RecordingsConversation AnalysisCommunicationParalinguisticsSpeech PerceptionPersuasionPsychologySpeech CommunicationNonverbal CommunicationHealth Sciences
In three experiments, subjects listened to recordings of male speakers answering two interview questions and rated the speakers on a variety of scales.The recordings had been altered so that the pitch of the speakers' voices was raised or lowered by 20% or left at its normal level, and speech rate was expanded or compressed by 30% or left at its normal rate.The results provided clear evidence that listeners use these acoustic properties in making personal attributions to speakers.Speakers with high-pitched voices were judged less truthful, less emphatic, less "potent" (smaller, thinner, faster), and more nervous.Slow-talking speakers were judged less truthful, less fluent, and less persuasive and were seen as more "passive" (slower, colder, passive, weaker) but more "potent."However, the effects of the acoustic manipulations on personal attributions also depended on the particular question that elicited the response.
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