Researchers find joyful screams perceived more strongly than screams of fear, anger

By ANI | Published: April 14, 2021 02:26 PM2021-04-14T14:26:35+5:302021-04-14T20:25:15+5:30

The human scream signals more than fear of imminent danger or entanglement in social conflicts. Screaming can also express joy or excitement. For the first time, researchers have demonstrated that non-alarming screams are even perceived and processed by the brain more efficiently than their alarming counterparts.

Researchers find joyful screams perceived more strongly than screams of fear, anger | Researchers find joyful screams perceived more strongly than screams of fear, anger

Researchers find joyful screams perceived more strongly than screams of fear, anger

The human scream signals more than fear of imminent danger or entanglement in social conflicts. Screaming can also express joy or excitement. For the first time, researchers have demonstrated that non-alarming screams are even perceived and processed by the brain more efficiently than their alarming counterparts.

Screaming can save lives. Non-human primates and other mammalian species frequently use scream-like calls when embroiled in social conflicts or to signal the presence of predators and other threats. While humans also scream to signal danger or communicate aggression, they scream when experiencing strong emotions such as despair or joy as well. However, past studies on this topic have largely focused on alarming fear screams.

Humans respond to positive screams more quickly and with higher sensitivity, the study suggested. The findings of the study were published in the journal 'PLOS Biology'.

In the new study, a team at the University of Zurich Department of Psychology led by Sascha Fruhholz investigated the meng behind the full spectrum of human scream calls. The results revealed six emotionally distinct types of scream calls indicating pain, anger, fear, pleasure, sadness and joy. "We were surprised by the fact that listeners responded more quickly and accurately, and with a higher neural sensitivity, to non-alarming and positive scream calls than to alarming screams," said Fruhholz.

 

The research team carried out four experiments for their study. Twelve participants were asked to vocalize positive and negative screams that might be elicited by various situations. A different group of individuals rated the emotional nature of the screams and classified them into different categories. While participants listened to the screams, their brain activity underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to monitor how they perceived, recognized, processed and categorized the sounds.

"The frontal, auditory and limbic brain regions showed much more activity and neural connectivity when hearing non-alarm screams than when processing alarm scream calls," explained Fruhholz.

 

It was previously assumed that human and primate cognitive systems were specially tailored for recognizing threat and danger signals in the form of screams. In contrast to primates and other mal species, however, human scream calls seem to have become more diversified over the course of human evolution -- something that Fruhholz considers to be a big evolutionary leap.

"It's highly possible that only humans scream to signal positive emotions like great joy or pleasure. And unlike with alarm calls, positive screams have become increasingly important over time," he said.

Researchers suggest that this may be due to the communicative demands brought about by humans' increasingly complex social environments.

( With inputs from ANI )

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