Changing The Tone Of Your Voice May Boost Your Mood, And Here's How

Researchers dig into the science of "vocal emotion."
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Scientists reveal how the tone of your voice is linked to your happiness.
ImagesBazaar via Getty Images

If you want to feel happier, try sounding happier. 

That's according to a new study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday, which finds that our emotions don't just affect our voices -- our voices can also influence our emotional state. 

"The voice is one of our main channels of emotional expression, and the results of this study indicate that when we speak we do not just influence others but also ourselves," Dr. Petter Johansson, a researcher at Lund University in Sweden and one of the study's authors, told The Huffington Post in an email. "In a sense, we listen to our own voice to find out how we feel."

For the study, an international team of researchers created a digital audio platform that allowed them to covertly alter the emotional tone of people's voices while they were talking to make them sound happier, more sad or more fearful. (The voice manipulation platform is available online here.)

Then, the researchers asked 109 participants to read a short story aloud while listening to themselves through a headset. During this experiment, the researchers were subtly manipulating the participants' voices to sound happier, more sad or more fearful without the participants' knowledge.

The researchers found that when people listened to their altered voice, it changed their mood. They took on whatever emotion their voice was expressing -- whether happiness, sadness or fear.

"There is a lot of emotional information contained in a person's voice, such as change in pitch indicating happiness or sadness, increase in volume showing anger, vibrato indicating fear or stress, talking speed signaling excitement, and so on," Johansson said.

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This graph depicts how voice audio affects emotions.
CNRS

How did the researchers manipulate the emotional tone of the voices? To make a voice sound happier, for instance, they altered the pitch and inflection so as to convey positivity, while also increasing dynamic range to make the voice sound more confident. Comparable adjustments were made to make the voices sound sadder or fearful. 

The research suggests that we actually listen to our own voices to get a sense of how we're feeling, and that vocal information may be a powerful way to change a person's emotional state. 

Additionally, the researchers say the study's findings are important as scientists know so little about how vocal emotion works and gaining a better understanding could lead to therapeutic technologies that treat depression and anxiety. For instance, patients could retell positive memories and listen to a version of their own voice that has been modified to make them sound happier, thus improving their mood.

The research is similar to previous psychological experiments that showed how the simple act of smiling influenced the mood of the participants.

"What we have demonstrated is that something similar holds for the voice," Johansson said. "But it is an open question, what would happen if you intentionally set out to speak with a happier voice in order to increase your happiness?"

Also on HuffPost:

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Make Less Comparisons(01 of05)
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While comparative thinking can be helpful for problem solving, too much is harmful to our happiness. Spending too much time comparing "apples to oranges" can eliminate that good feeling. Photo Credit: © Flickr / TheBusyBrain

Show Gratitude(02 of05)
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Being appreciative of things that come your way will create an overall happier you. To build more gratitude in your life, Dr. Aiken suggests writing down three things that went well each day and why. Photo Credit: © Flickr / Lucas Bulamah
Wake Up Consistently(03 of05)
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Getting out of bed at the same time each day helps to set your neurohormones that directly affect your happiness levels. Photo Credit: © Flickr /Alan CleaverClick Here to See More Habits of Genuinely Happy People
Have a Fulfilling Job(04 of05)
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Sometimes your job can make feel miserable. But, happier people find work that draws on their strengths and connects them to greater purpose meaningful to them. Dr. Aiken also advises, “Working more than 11 hours a day increases depression, as does night shift work and long daily commutes.”Photo Credit: © Flickr /Scott Hill
Have Perfect Bedtime Light(05 of05)
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Your bedtime procedures can make a huge difference to how you feel during the day. At nighttime, the darker the better, "noncturnal ambient light increases depression," says Dr. Aiken. And during the morning, bright light is best. "A 'dawn simulator' which gradually turns on light in the morning can improve alertness and energy," continues Dr. Aiken. Click Here to See More Habits of Genuinely Happy PeoplePhoto Credit: © Flickr / enggul

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