Correction for Bryant et al., Detecting affiliation in colaughter across 24 societies

Journal Article (2016)
Authors

Gregory A. Bryant (University of California)

D.M.T. Fessler (University of California)

Riccardo Fusaroli (Aarhus University)

Edward Clint (University of California)

L. Aarøe (Aarhus University)

C.L. Apicella (University of Pennsylvania)

M. Bang Petersen (Aarhus University)

S.T. Bickham (College of DuPage)

A. Bolyanatz (College of DuPage)

B. Chavez (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú)

D. De Smet (Universiteit Gent)

C. Díaz (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú)

J. Fančovičová (University of Trnava)

M. Fux (University of South Africa)

P. Giraldo-Perez (The University of Auckland)

A Hu (Fudan University)

S.V. Kamble (Karnatak University Dharwad)

T. Kameda (University of Tokyo)

N.P. Li (Singapore Management University)

F.R. Luberti (University of California)

P. Prokop (Slovak Academy of Sciences, University of Trnava)

K. Quintelier (Universiteit van Amsterdam)

B.A. Scelza (University of California)

H. Jung Shin (Pusan National University)

M. Soler (Montclair State University)

S. Stieger (Universität Konstanz, University of Vienna)

W. Toyokawa (Hokkaido University)

Ellis van den Hende (TU Delft - Responsible Marketing and Consumer Behavior)

H. Viciana-Asensio (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne)

S.E. Yildizhan (Uludag University)

Y. Zhou (Fudan University)

Research Group
Responsible Marketing and Consumer Behavior
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1606204113
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2016
Language
English
Research Group
Responsible Marketing and Consumer Behavior
Issue number
21
Volume number
113
Pages (from-to)
E3051
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1606204113

Abstract

Laughter is a nonverbal vocal expression that often communicates positive affect and cooperative intent in humans. Temporally coincident laughter occurring within groups is a potentially rich cue of affiliation to overhearers. We examined listeners’ judgments of affiliation based on brief, decontextualized instances of colaughter between either established friends or recently acquainted strangers. In a sample of 966 participants from 24 societies, people reliably distinguished friends from strangers with an accuracy of 53–67%. Acoustic analyses of the individual laughter segments revealed that, across cultures, listeners’ judgments were consistently predicted by voicing dynamics, suggesting perceptual sensitivity to emotionally triggered spontaneous production. Colaughter affords rapid and accurate appraisals of affiliation that transcend cultural and linguistic boundaries, and may constitute a universal means of signaling cooperative relationships.

No files available

Metadata only record. There are no files for this record.