Content matters: Cyclic effects on women's voices depend on social context

Women's voices reportedly sound more attractive during the fertile days compared to the non-fertile days of their menstrual cycle. Here we investigated whether the speech content modulates the cyclic changes in women's voices. We asked 72 men and women to rate how interested they were in g...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hormones and behavior 2020-06, Vol.122, p.104762-104762, Article 104762
Hauptverfasser: Klatt, Wilhelm K., Mayer, Boris, Lobmaier, Janek S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Women's voices reportedly sound more attractive during the fertile days compared to the non-fertile days of their menstrual cycle. Here we investigated whether the speech content modulates the cyclic changes in women's voices. We asked 72 men and women to rate how interested they were in getting to know the speaker based on her voice. Forty-two naturally cycling women were recorded once during the late follicular phase (high fertility) and once during the luteal phase (low fertility) while speaking sentences of neutral and social content. Listeners were more interested in getting to know the speakers when hearing sentences with social content. Furthermore, raters were more interested in getting to know the speakers when these were recorded in the late follicular than in the luteal phase, but only in sentences with social content. Notably, levels of reproductive hormones (EP ratio) across the cycle phases did not significantly predict the preference for late follicular voices, but echoing the perceptual ratings, there was a significant EP ratio x speech content interaction. Phonetic analyses of mean fundamental frequency (F0) revealed a main effect of menstrual cycle phase and speech content but no interaction. Employing an action-oriented task, the present study extends findings of cycle-dependent voice changes by emphasising that speech content critically modulates fertility effects. •Women's voices reportedly sound more attractive during the fertile days.•We investigated the role of speech content in the cyclic changes in women's voices.•We found a cycle effect only for sentences with social content.•Levels of reproductive hormones were positively related to perceptual ratings.•These results suggest that speech content critically modulates fertility effects.
ISSN:0018-506X
1095-6867
DOI:10.1016/j.yhbeh.2020.104762