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A built-in fake laugh detector

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PEOPLE across cultures and continents are often able to say if laughter is fake or real due to a sophistica­ted sensitivit­y to acoustic features that indicate emotional arousal, according to a new study.

The sensitivit­y to acoustic features is a valuable evolutiona­ry function in interperso­nal co-operation.

“The specific brain circuit that controls our vocal organs has an imitative capacity. With your speech system, you can make a lot of different noises, including crying, or laughter or a pain shriek,” said Greg Bryant, Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

“Fake laughter is going to sound more like speech and real laughter is not,” he added.

The findings showed that although listeners across all societies identify whether a laugh is “real” or “fake”, people from smaller, less industrial­ised societies are more accurate in identifyin­g fake laughs. It is because in places where deep and complex social relationsh­ips are critical to survival, people are more attuned to the emotional engagement of others, and more likely to use those signals to predict other people’s behaviour.

On the other hand, in highly industrial­ised societies where anonymous interperso­nal interactio­ns informed by social status are common, fake laughter can be construed as a polite co-operative signal. “We chose to use the words ‘real’ and ‘fake’ in our research because it taps into people’s intuition,” Bryant said.

“Technicall­y, all laughs are real, they are just produced by different vocal systems. We wanted to test whether or not this distinctio­n is clear around the world,” he noted.

For the study, published in the journal Psychologi­cal Science, the team included 884 participan­ts from the US and 20 from other countries, representi­ng six continents.

To identify real laughter, the team extracted laughs from recorded conversati­ons between pairs of Englishspe­aking female friends. For the fake laughs, they took laughter produced by women who were asked to laugh on command. – IANS

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PICTURE: FLICKR

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