Eylem Seç
Social Reinforcement, Appeasement, and Punishment: The Multiple Functions of Laughter
Başlık:
Social Reinforcement, Appeasement, and Punishment: The Multiple Functions of Laughter
Yazar:
Wood, Adrienne, author.
ISBN:
9780438101524
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 electronic resource (123 pages)
Genel Not:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 79-11(E), Section: B.
Advisors: Paula M. Niedenthal Committee members: Joseph Austerweil; Gary Lupyan; Maryellen MacDonald; Lauren Riters.
Özet:
Laughter is ubiquitous, universal, and variable. This dissertation tests a new social functional account that explains the many physical forms laughter takes and the many social contexts in which it occurs. In contrast to previous perspectives that emphasize the internal state of the producer or the eliciting context, the current social functional account distinguishes laughter according to the behavioral intention it conveys and the subsequent behavioral response it elicits in the recipient. Laughter is a communicative signal that solves (at least) three basic social tasks that can occur across social contexts and relationships. The first proposed social function of laughter, both evolutionarily and developmentally, is to reward the behavior of others and reinforce the ongoing interaction. The second task accomplished by the production of modified laughter is the easing of social tension and signaling of affiliation and nonthreat. A third form of laughter non-confrontationally enforces social norms, negotiates status, and corrects undesirable behavior in others by conveying dominance or superiority.
We propose that people modify physical properties of their laughter in the service of the three social tasks, and that the acoustic modulations follow principles common to human and non-human vocal signaling. Three studies tested the validity of the social function account of laughter and investigated how the acoustic form of laughter is modulated in order to produce different social effects. Participants rated the extent to which laughs convey the social functions (Study 1), judged the similarity of laughs to validated smiles that accomplish the social tasks (Study 2), and produced natural laughter with a partner while watching and discussing videos that elicit responses relevant to the three social tasks (Study 3). We complemented traditional inferential statistics with machine learning algorithms trained to predict the social functions accomplished by instances of laughter.
In Study 1, perceivers' judgments of how rewarding, affiliative, and dominant laughter sounded were guided by distinct patterns of acoustic variables, which were in turn used by a machine learning model to accurately estimate the perceived social function of the laughs. This study suggested that perceivers infer nuanced social information from laughter based on its acoustic form. Study 2, which relied entirely on non-linguistic judgments about laughter-smile similarity, resulted in a laughter similarity embedding that retained the laughs' social functional category assignment from Study 1 participants' linguistic judgments. Study 2 therefore provided convergent evidence about the perceived social meaning of the laughter. Study 3 was the first study to test the social functional account of either smiles or laughter using naturally-occurring signals. Laughs generated by participant pairs across 3 functionally-relevant contexts differed on several acoustic variables, some of which converged with the perceiver-based data in Study 1. Throughout, we connect existing findings in the human and nonhuman vocalization literature to the current work's findings on the acoustic properties of reward, affiliation, and dominance laughter. In sum, this research accounts for some of the substantial variability in the physical form of laughter and, more generally, demonstrates the predictive power of a social functional approach to emotion expression.
Notlar:
School code: 0262
Tüzel Kişi Ek Girişi:
Mevcut:*
Yer Numarası | Demirbaş Numarası | Shelf Location | Lokasyon / Statüsü / İade Tarihi |
---|---|---|---|
XX(695240.1) | 695240-1001 | Proquest E-Tez Koleksiyonu | Arıyor... |
On Order
Liste seç
Bunu varsayılan liste yap.
Öğeler başarıyla eklendi
Öğeler eklenirken hata oldu. Lütfen tekrar deneyiniz.
:
Select An Item
Data usage warning: You will receive one text message for each title you selected.
Standard text messaging rates apply.