Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies. / Briefer, Elodie F; Mandel, Roi; Maigrot, Anne-Laure; Briefer Freymond, Sabrina; Bachmann, Iris; Hillmann, Edna.

In: Frontiers in Zoology, Vol. 14, 8, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Briefer, EF, Mandel, R, Maigrot, A-L, Briefer Freymond, S, Bachmann, I & Hillmann, E 2017, 'Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies', Frontiers in Zoology, vol. 14, 8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12983-017-0193-1

APA

Briefer, E. F., Mandel, R., Maigrot, A-L., Briefer Freymond, S., Bachmann, I., & Hillmann, E. (2017). Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies. Frontiers in Zoology, 14, [8]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12983-017-0193-1

Vancouver

Briefer EF, Mandel R, Maigrot A-L, Briefer Freymond S, Bachmann I, Hillmann E. Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies. Frontiers in Zoology. 2017;14. 8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12983-017-0193-1

Author

Briefer, Elodie F ; Mandel, Roi ; Maigrot, Anne-Laure ; Briefer Freymond, Sabrina ; Bachmann, Iris ; Hillmann, Edna. / Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies. In: Frontiers in Zoology. 2017 ; Vol. 14.

Bibtex

@article{f597bb8de68b4d508f0e60301a4f98eb,
title = "Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Non-human animals often produce different types of vocalisations in negative and positive contexts (i.e. different valence), similar to humans, in which crying is associated with negative emotions and laughter is associated with positive ones. However, some types of vocalisations (e.g. contact calls, human speech) can be produced in both negative and positive contexts, and changes in valence are only accompanied by slight structural differences. Although such acoustically graded signals associated with opposite valence have been highlighted in some species, it is not known if conspecifics discriminate them, and if contagion of emotional valence occurs as a result. We tested whether domestic horses perceive, and are affected by, the emotional valence of whinnies produced by both familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics. We measured physiological and behavioural reactions to whinnies recorded during emotionally negative (social separation) and positive (social reunion) situations.RESULTS: We show that horses perceive acoustic cues to both valence and familiarity present in whinnies. They reacted differently (respiration rate, head movements, height of the head and latency to respond) to separation and reunion whinnies when produced by familiar, but not unfamiliar individuals. They were also more emotionally aroused (shorter inter-pulse intervals and higher locomotion) when hearing unfamiliar compared to familiar whinnies. In addition, the acoustic parameters of separation and reunion whinnies affected the physiology and behaviour of conspecifics in a continuous way. However, we did not find clear evidence for contagion of emotional valence.CONCLUSIONS: Horses are thus able to perceive changes linked to emotional valence within a given vocalisation type, similar to perception of affective prosody in humans. Whinnies produced in either separation or reunion situations seem to constitute acoustically graded variants with distinct functions, enabling horses to increase their apparent vocal repertoire size.",
author = "Briefer, {Elodie F} and Roi Mandel and Anne-Laure Maigrot and {Briefer Freymond}, Sabrina and Iris Bachmann and Edna Hillmann",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1186/s12983-017-0193-1",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "Frontiers in Zoology",
issn = "1742-9994",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Perception of emotional valence in horse whinnies

AU - Briefer, Elodie F

AU - Mandel, Roi

AU - Maigrot, Anne-Laure

AU - Briefer Freymond, Sabrina

AU - Bachmann, Iris

AU - Hillmann, Edna

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - BACKGROUND: Non-human animals often produce different types of vocalisations in negative and positive contexts (i.e. different valence), similar to humans, in which crying is associated with negative emotions and laughter is associated with positive ones. However, some types of vocalisations (e.g. contact calls, human speech) can be produced in both negative and positive contexts, and changes in valence are only accompanied by slight structural differences. Although such acoustically graded signals associated with opposite valence have been highlighted in some species, it is not known if conspecifics discriminate them, and if contagion of emotional valence occurs as a result. We tested whether domestic horses perceive, and are affected by, the emotional valence of whinnies produced by both familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics. We measured physiological and behavioural reactions to whinnies recorded during emotionally negative (social separation) and positive (social reunion) situations.RESULTS: We show that horses perceive acoustic cues to both valence and familiarity present in whinnies. They reacted differently (respiration rate, head movements, height of the head and latency to respond) to separation and reunion whinnies when produced by familiar, but not unfamiliar individuals. They were also more emotionally aroused (shorter inter-pulse intervals and higher locomotion) when hearing unfamiliar compared to familiar whinnies. In addition, the acoustic parameters of separation and reunion whinnies affected the physiology and behaviour of conspecifics in a continuous way. However, we did not find clear evidence for contagion of emotional valence.CONCLUSIONS: Horses are thus able to perceive changes linked to emotional valence within a given vocalisation type, similar to perception of affective prosody in humans. Whinnies produced in either separation or reunion situations seem to constitute acoustically graded variants with distinct functions, enabling horses to increase their apparent vocal repertoire size.

AB - BACKGROUND: Non-human animals often produce different types of vocalisations in negative and positive contexts (i.e. different valence), similar to humans, in which crying is associated with negative emotions and laughter is associated with positive ones. However, some types of vocalisations (e.g. contact calls, human speech) can be produced in both negative and positive contexts, and changes in valence are only accompanied by slight structural differences. Although such acoustically graded signals associated with opposite valence have been highlighted in some species, it is not known if conspecifics discriminate them, and if contagion of emotional valence occurs as a result. We tested whether domestic horses perceive, and are affected by, the emotional valence of whinnies produced by both familiar and unfamiliar conspecifics. We measured physiological and behavioural reactions to whinnies recorded during emotionally negative (social separation) and positive (social reunion) situations.RESULTS: We show that horses perceive acoustic cues to both valence and familiarity present in whinnies. They reacted differently (respiration rate, head movements, height of the head and latency to respond) to separation and reunion whinnies when produced by familiar, but not unfamiliar individuals. They were also more emotionally aroused (shorter inter-pulse intervals and higher locomotion) when hearing unfamiliar compared to familiar whinnies. In addition, the acoustic parameters of separation and reunion whinnies affected the physiology and behaviour of conspecifics in a continuous way. However, we did not find clear evidence for contagion of emotional valence.CONCLUSIONS: Horses are thus able to perceive changes linked to emotional valence within a given vocalisation type, similar to perception of affective prosody in humans. Whinnies produced in either separation or reunion situations seem to constitute acoustically graded variants with distinct functions, enabling horses to increase their apparent vocal repertoire size.

U2 - 10.1186/s12983-017-0193-1

DO - 10.1186/s12983-017-0193-1

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28203263

VL - 14

JO - Frontiers in Zoology

JF - Frontiers in Zoology

SN - 1742-9994

M1 - 8

ER -

ID: 226787336