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Teenagers have a hard time reading one another鈥檚 tones of voice

But when it comes to understanding adult tones of voice 鈥 they are right on!

Your teenage daughter gets into a shouting match with another kid at school. It turns out that it may have started over something as simple as not understanding one another鈥檚 tones of voice. Newly published research in the shows that the ability to understand what someone is feeling based on their tone of voice can be challenging in mid-adolescence (between 13-15 year olds). While adults are able to accurately read a range of emotions in the voices of teens, and the opposite also holds true, teens are far less able to understand what is going on with their peers, particularly when it comes to tones of voice which express anger, meanness, disgust, or happiness.

鈥淥ur results suggest that teenagers have not yet reached maturity in either their ability to identify vocal emotions, or to express them,鈥 said Michele Morningstar, the first author on the paper, who conducted the research while completing her Ph.D. in Psychology at 六合彩开奖结果. 鈥淭his means that teenagers face quite a challenge in their social spheres: they must interpret poorly expressed cues with immature recognition skills. Understanding how we learn emotional communication skills will be important to help teenagers who struggle socially.鈥

Reading inflections to decode a speaker鈥檚 feelings

The researchers played a total of 140 recordings made by child and adult actors to 50 teens between 13-15 years old and to 86 adults between the ages of 18-30. The recordings were of neutral phrases such as 鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe you just did that鈥 which could be expressed with various intonations to convey different feelings. Participants of all ages were asked to select the emotion being conveyed in each recording, choosing from five basic emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, and sadness) and from social expressions of affiliation (friendliness) or hostility (meanness).

Have a listen to see whether you can identify these emotions easily:

  1. Audio icon s3rm_1_online-audio-converter.com_.mp3
  2. Audio icon s10s_1_online-audio-converter.com_.mp3

Can鈥檛 guess? Tone of voice #1 is designed to convey meanness and tone of voice #2...sadness. If you are an adult and hearing these tones, you may want to try it out on a teen to see whether they come to the same conclusions as you.

The results showed a clear divide at a couple of different levels. The adults had no trouble, generally, reading the emotions of their peers, and had relatively few problems discerning the emotions of the teens. Teens, on the other hand, could read the emotions of the adults without difficulty, but struggled to understand the expressions of their peers. Morningstar鈥檚 earlier research suggests that one reason for that may be that teens鈥 are less able than adults to produce recognizable emotions with their voices. Adults鈥 greater skill at recognizing emotion may become more apparent when trying to decode these more challenging signals.

鈥淧arents shouldn鈥檛 get too discouraged by these findings,鈥 adds Melanie Dirks, the senior author on the paper. 鈥淎lthough what we showed is that it takes longer for teens to recognize and identify the feelings of others than had previously been thought to be the case, further research from Dr. Morningstar suggests that it may just be a matter of brain development. That things will come with time.鈥

The research was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

To read: 鈥淢id-Adolescents鈥 and Adults鈥 Recognition of Vocal Cues of Emotion and Social Intent: Differences by Expression and Speaker Age鈥 by Michele Morningstar et al in Journal of Nonverbal Behavior

Contacts:
Michele Morningstar, michele.morningstar [at] mail.mcgill.ca (English & French interviews)
Melanie Dirks, Psychology Department, 六合彩开奖结果,听Melanie.dirks [at] mcgill.ca (English interviews)
Katherine Gombay, Media and Public Relations, 六合彩开奖结果, katherine.gombay [at] mcgill.ca听听

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