Litcius/Paper detail

Terrifying film music mimics alarming acoustic feature of human screams

Caitlyn Trevor, Luc H. Arnal, Sascha Frühholz

2020The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One way music is thought to convey emotion is by mimicking acoustic features of affective human vocalizations [Juslin and Laukka (2003). Psychol. Bull. 129(5), 770-814]. Regarding fear, it has been informally noted that music for scary scenes in films frequently exhibits a "scream-like" character. Here, this proposition is formally tested. This paper reports acoustic analyses for four categories of audio stimuli: screams, non-screaming vocalizations, scream-like music, and non-scream-like music. Valence and arousal ratings were also collected. Results support the hypothesis that a key feature of human screams (roughness) is imitated by scream-like music and could potentially signal danger through both music and the voice.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyValence (chemistry)ScreamingCommunicationArousalFeature (linguistics)PropositionSpeech recognitionLinguisticsSocial psychologyComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsPhysicsPhilosophyNeuroscience and Music PerceptionMultisensory perception and integrationMusic and Audio Processing