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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Introduction: Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) are a cardinal
symptom of schizophrenia but are also reported in the general
population without need for psychiatric care. Previous evidence
suggests that AVH may reflect an imbalance of prior
expectation and sensory information, and that altered salience
processing is characteristic of both psychotic and non-clinical
voice hearers. However, it remains to be shown how such an
imbalance affects the categorisation of vocal emotions in
perceptual ambiguity.
Methods: Neutral and emotional nonverbal vocalisations were
morphed along two continua differing in valence (anger;
pleasure), each including 11 morphing steps at intervals of
10%. College students (N = 234) differing in AVH proneness
(measured with the Launay-Slade Hallucination Scale) evaluated
the emotional quality of the vocalisations.
Results: Increased AVH proneness was associated with more
frequent categorisation of ambiguous vocalisations as ‘neutral’,
irrespective of valence. Similarly, the perceptual boundary for
emotional classification was shifted by AVH proneness:
participants needed more emotional information to categorise
a voice as emotional.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that emotional salience in
vocalisations is dampened as a function of increased AVH
proneness. This could be related to changes in the acoustic
representations of emotions or reflect top-down expectations
of less salient information in the social environment.
Description
Keywords
Auditory verbal Hallucinations Psychosis continuum Emotion Perceptual ambiguity Salience processing
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Amorim, M., Roberto, M. S., Kotz, S. A., & Pinheiro, A. P. (2022). The perceived salience of vocal emotions is dampened in non-clinical auditory verbal hallucinations. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 27(2-3), 169-182.
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
