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It has long been established that
emotions reflect in our voice—this helps us communicate more purposefully and
gives listeners cues as to how they should interpret what we say. But what
emotions predominate in complaints—and how do they differ between groups?
Researchers in Switzerland and Canada investigated and published their findings
in Frontiers in Communication.
"Complaining is differentiated
from neutral speech by changes in vocal expression. Complainers tend to change
their intonation, pitch, rhythm, and emphasis, making them sound more emotive
and expressive," said first author Dr. Maël Mauchand, a neuroscientist at
the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences at the University of Geneva.
"We show that complaining
strategies show specific variations across two francophone cultures, with
Québécois sounding more angry or surprised and French speakers sounding
sadder."
Conventions for complaints
Knowing in detail what complaints
sound like could help researchers understand how they are perceived and how
they elicit empathy in others.
For the experiment, the researchers
recruited eight speakers (four French and four Québécois) who recorded 84 short
sentences in a neutral and a complaining voice—irrespective of linguistic
content. Then, 40 people living in Quebec, half of whom had grown up in France,
assessed the emotions (happy, sad, angry, surprised, fearful, disgusted) in a
selection of utterances.
"Complaining strategies seem
consistent toward defining a general 'complaining tone of voice', with a few specific cultural variations,"
Mauchand explained. For example, complaints were delivered with a higher and
more variable pitch as well as louder and slower in general.
These parameters differed slightly
between cultures, for example, the French spoke at a higher pitch. In contrast,
Québécois showed greater pitch variability, which indicates more pronounced
changes in intonation across their complaint.
Sad or angry?
Complaints reconstruct emotional states and speakers complain to convey or re-live a
negative experience. Accordingly, they convey strong emotions that stress this
negativity. On an emotional level, listening participants rated Québécois as sounding
angrier, more surprised, and more disgusted than French speakers, whereas
French speakers were rated as sounding sadder.
"There may be cultural norms on what a complaint sounds like in France or in
Quebec, influenced by their use," Mauchand explained.
"The French are said to
complain quite often—if complaining is frequent and ritualized, it makes sense
that complainers try to make their voice sound less aggressive, for example by
using higher intonation and sounding more sad than angry."
On the other hand, Québécois are
generally more expressive in their speech, which might explain why high-arousal
emotions like surprise or anger are more prominent in their complaints.
"There may be social
conventions on what a complaint sounds like in a particular culture, which can
be learned as we grow up," Mauchand pointed out. "How we complain is
a subtle interplay between emotion, social context, and cultural display rules."
Beyond words
The researchers pointed out that
their sample size, limited in both the number of speakers and cultures
represented, could mean their results aren't generalizable. In addition,
complaints may take other forms in longer statements or interactions. Further
research could examine if such cultural differences can be found in speakers of
the same language who grew up in different cultures.
While the trend might be universal,
such variations could depend on the cultural importance of complaints: how
often a culture complains, why people complain, and how complaints are received by others, the team said.
The work highlights the critical
role of the tone of voice in social interactions and the information may be
used in studies about communication disorders and in therapy training.
"As an immediate application, it could encourage people to be more attentive," concluded Mauchand. "Not just to what people say, but how they say it—and what it implies."
Source: Why some complaints sound angrier: Study uncovers cultural clues in voices
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