
Everybody laughs, everybody cries:
Researchers identify universal emotions
“Here’s a piece of research that might
leave you tickled: laughter is a universal language, according to new
research. The study, conducted with people from Britain and Namibia,
suggests that basic emotions such as amusement, anger, fear and sadness
are shared by all humans.
Everybody
shares the vast majority of their genetic makeup with each other,
meaning that most of our physical characteristics are similar. We all
share other attributes, too, such as having complex systems of
communication to convey our thoughts, feelings and the intentions of
those around us, and we are all able to express a wide range of emotions
through language, sounds, facial expressions and posture. However, the
way that we communicate is not always the same - for example, people
from different cultures may not understand the same words and phrases or
body language.
In an attempt to find out if certain emotions are universal,
researchers led by Professor Sophie Scott from UCL (University College
London) have studied whether the sounds associated with emotions such as
happiness, anger, fear, sadness, disgust and surprise are shared amongst
different cultures.
The results of their study, funded by the Wellcome Trust, Economic
and Social Research Council, University of London Central Research Fund
and UCL, are published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences. They provide further evidence that such emotions form a set of
basic, evolved functions that are shared by all humans.
Dr. Disa Sauter, studied people from Britain and from the Himba, a
group of over 20,000 people living in small settlements in northern
Namibia as part of her PhD research at UCL. In the very remote
settlements, where the data for the present study were collected, the
individuals live completely traditional lives, with no electricity,
running water, formal education, or any contact with people from other
groups.
Participants in the study listened to a short story based around a
particular emotion, for example, how a person is very sad because a
relative of theirs had died recently. At the end of the story they heard
two sounds such as crying and of laughter and were asked to identify
which of the two sounds reflected the emotion being expressed in the
story. The British group heard sounds from the Himba and vice versa.
“People from both groups seemed to find the basic emotions; anger,
fear, disgust, amusement, sadness and surprise; the most easily
recognisable,” says Professor Scott, a Wellcome Trust Senior Research
Fellow. “This suggests that these emotions and their vocalisations are
similar across all human cultures.”
The findings support previous research which showed that facial
expressions of these basic emotions are recognised across a wide range
of cultures.
Despite the considerable variation in human facial musculature, the
facial muscles that are essential to produce the basic emotions are
constant across individuals, suggesting that specific facial muscle
structures have likely evolved to allow individuals to produce
universally recognisable emotional expressions.
One positive sound was particularly well recognised by both groups of
participants: laughter. Listeners from both cultures agreed that
laughter signified amusement, exemplified as the feeling of being
tickled.
“Tickling makes everyone laugh and not just humans,” says Dr. Disa
Sauter, who tested the Himba and English participants. “We see this
happen in other primates such as chimpanzees, as well as other mammals.
This suggests that laughter has deep evolutionary roots, possibly
originating as part of playful communication between young infants and
mothers.
“Our study supports the idea that laughter is universally associated
with being tickled and reflects the feeling of enjoyment of physical
play.”
Previous studies have shown that smiling is universally recognised as
a signal of happiness, raising the possibility that laughter is the
auditory equivalent of smiles, both communicating a state of enjoyment.
However, explains Professor Scott, it is possible that laughter and
smiles are in fact quite different types of signals, with smiles
functioning as a signal of generally positive social intent, whereas
laughter may be a more specific emotional signal, originating in play.
Not all positive sounds were easily recognisable to both cultures,
however. Some, such as the sound of pleasure or achievement appear not
to be shared across cultures, but are instead specific to a particular
group or region. The researchers believe this may be due to the function
of positive emotions, which facilitate social cohesion between group
members. Such bonding behaviour may be restricted to in-group members
with whom social connections are built and maintained. However, it may
not be desirable to share such signals with individuals who are not
members of one’s own cultural group.
- ScienceDaily
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