Emotional reactions to naturally occurring sounds
(e.g., screams, erotica, bombs, etc.) were investigated
in two studies. In Experiment 1, subjects rated the pleasure
and arousal elicited when listening to each of 60 sounds,
followed by an incidental free recall task. The shape of
the two-dimensional affective space defined by the mean
ratings for each sound was similar to that previously obtained
for pictures, and, like memory for pictures, free recall
was highest for emotionally arousing stimuli. In Experiment
2, autonomic and facial electromyographic (EMG) activity
were recorded while a new group of subjects listened to
the same set of sounds; the startle reflex was measured
using visual probes. Listening to unpleasant sounds resulted
in larger startle reflexes, more corrugator EMG activity,
and larger heart rate deceleration compared with listening
to pleasant sounds. Electrodermal reactions were larger
for emotionally arousing than for neutral materials. Taken
together, the data suggest that acoustic cues activate
the appetitive and defensive motivational circuits underlying
emotional expression in ways similar to pictures.