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Geneva: We notice aggressive or threatening voices much faster than those that sound normal or happy, scientists say.

According to the study published in the journal Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, our attention is more focused on threatening voices to enable us to clearly recognise the location of the potential threat.

Researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE) in Switzerland showed how our brain leverages resources when we sense danger to allow for adequate survival behaviour.

Sight and hearing are the two senses that allow human beings to detect threatening situations.

Although sight is critical, it does not allow for a 360-degree coverage of the surrounding space -- unlike hearing.

"That's why we are interested in how fast our attention responds to the different intonations of the voices around us and how our brain deals with potentially threatening situations," said Nicolas Burra, a researcher at UNIGE.

To examine the brain's response to threats in the auditory environment, the researchers presented 22 short human voice sounds (600 milliseconds) that were neutral utterances or expressed either anger or joy.

Using two loudspeakers, these sounds were presented to 35 participants while an electroencephalogram (EEG) measured electrical activity in the brain down to the millisecond. More specifically, the researchers focused on the electrophysiological components related to auditory attentional processing.

"Each participant



heard two sounds simultaneously: two neutral voices, one neutral and one angry voice, or one neutral and one happy voice. When they perceived anger or joy, they had to respond by pressing a key on a keyboard as accurately and quickly as possible," said Leonardo Ceravolo, researcher at UNIGE.

"We then measured the intensity of brain activity when attention is focused on the different sounds, as well as the duration of this focus before a return to the basic state," he said.

Using data from the EEG, researchers examined the appearance of a cerebral marker of auditory attention called N2ac.

"When the brain perceives an emotional target sound, N2ac activity is triggered after 200 milliseconds. However, when it perceives anger, the N2ac is amplified and lasts longer," Burra said.

Subsequently, after 400 milliseconds, our attention must disengage from the emotional vocal stimulus.

At this moment, a cerebral marker of auditory attention, called LPCpc, intervenes. "Anger can signal a potential threat, which is why the brain analyses these kinds of stimuli for a longer time," said Ceravolo.

The study demonstrated for the first time that in a few hundred milliseconds, our brain is sensitive to the presence of angry voices, researchers said.

This rapid detection of the source of a potential threat in a complex environment is essential, as it is "critical in crisis situations and a great advantage for our survival," said Ceravolo.




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