Male Vocal Quality and Its Relation to Females’ Preferences
Author(s) -
Suire Alexandre,
Raymond Michel,
Barkat-Defradas Melissa
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
evolutionary psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.889
H-Index - 35
ISSN - 1474-7049
DOI - 10.1177/1474704919874675
Subject(s) - attractiveness , formant , psychology , intonation (linguistics) , context (archaeology) , breathy voice , quality (philosophy) , preference , mate choice , social psychology , audiology , vowel , phonation , speech recognition , linguistics , mating , computer science , mathematics , medicine , paleontology , ecology , philosophy , statistics , epistemology , psychoanalysis , biology
In both correlational and experimental settings, studies on women’s vocal preferences have reported negative relationships between perceived attractiveness and men’s vocal pitch, emphasizing the idea of an adaptive preference. However, such consensus on vocal attractiveness has been mostly conducted with native English speakers, but a few evidence suggest that it may be culture-dependent. Moreover, other overlooked acoustic components of vocal quality, such as intonation, perceived breathiness and roughness, may influence vocal attractiveness. In this context, the present study aims to contribute to the literature by investigating vocal attractiveness in an underrepresented language (i.e., French) as well as shedding light on its relationship with understudied acoustic components of vocal quality. More specifically, we investigated the relationships between attractiveness ratings as assessed by female raters and male voice pitch, its variation, the formants’ dispersion and position, and the harmonics-to-noise and jitter ratios. Results show that women were significantly more attracted to lower vocal pitch and higher intonation patterns. However, they did not show any directional preferences for all the other acoustic features. We discuss our results in light of the adaptive functions of vocal preferences in a mate choice context.
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