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Nowa treść strony, po modyfikacji (new_wikitext) | 'Both and [https://www.groundreport.com/?s=Japanese%20people Japanese people] can recognise their fellow countrymen by listening to the sound of their alone, a study has concluded.<br>Researchers led from the University of Amsterdam recorded the sounds of different types of laughter produced by volunteers from both and the Netherlands.<br>They then played these clips to a total of 404 Dutch and Japanese participants, who were able to tell if the laugher belonged to the same cultural group as them.<br>Specifically, Dutch listeners identified the laughter correctly in 73-76 per cent of the time (depending on laughter type) and [http://daftarslot.digital/ DAFTAR JUDI SLOT ONLINE TERPERCAYA GACOR] Japanese listeners 77 per cent of the time.<br>Spontaneous — — [https://www.houzz.com/photos/query/laughter laughter] was rated as most positive by both groups, but Dutch listeners rated Dutch laughter as being the most positive of all.<br><br>The findings, the team explained, add to mounting evidence that laughter is a rich vocal signal that listeners can use to make various inferences about other people. <br>Scroll down for videos<br> Both Dutch and Japanese people can recognise their fellow countrymen by listening to the sound of their laughter alone, a study has concluded<br> <div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS sciencetech" data-version="2" id="mol-6ca160a0-46d0-11ec-aff9-47ad8f75dff9" website and Japanese people recognise their countrymen from laughter' |
Diff wszystkich zmian dokonanych podczas edycji (edit_diff) | '@@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
+Both and [https://www.groundreport.com/?s=Japanese%20people Japanese people] can recognise their fellow countrymen by listening to the sound of their alone, a study has concluded.<br>Researchers led from the University of Amsterdam recorded the sounds of different types of laughter produced by volunteers from both and the Netherlands.<br>They then played these clips to a total of 404 Dutch and Japanese participants, who were able to tell if the laugher belonged to the same cultural group as them.<br>Specifically, Dutch listeners identified the laughter correctly in 73-76 per cent of the time (depending on laughter type) and [http://daftarslot.digital/ DAFTAR JUDI SLOT ONLINE TERPERCAYA GACOR] Japanese listeners 77 per cent of the time.<br>Spontaneous — — [https://www.houzz.com/photos/query/laughter laughter] was rated as most positive by both groups, but Dutch listeners rated Dutch laughter as being the most positive of all.<br><br>The findings, the team explained, add to mounting evidence that laughter is a rich vocal signal that listeners can use to make various inferences about other people. <br>Scroll down for videos<br> Both Dutch and Japanese people can recognise their fellow countrymen by listening to the sound of their laughter alone, a study has concluded<br> <div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS sciencetech" data-version="2" id="mol-6ca160a0-46d0-11ec-aff9-47ad8f75dff9" website and Japanese people recognise their countrymen from laughter
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Linie dodane podczas edycji (added_lines) | [
0 => 'Both and [https://www.groundreport.com/?s=Japanese%20people Japanese people] can recognise their fellow countrymen by listening to the sound of their alone, a study has concluded.<br>Researchers led from the University of Amsterdam recorded the sounds of different types of laughter produced by volunteers from both and the Netherlands.<br>They then played these clips to a total of 404 Dutch and Japanese participants, who were able to tell if the laugher belonged to the same cultural group as them.<br>Specifically, Dutch listeners identified the laughter correctly in 73-76 per cent of the time (depending on laughter type) and [http://daftarslot.digital/ DAFTAR JUDI SLOT ONLINE TERPERCAYA GACOR] Japanese listeners 77 per cent of the time.<br>Spontaneous — — [https://www.houzz.com/photos/query/laughter laughter] was rated as most positive by both groups, but Dutch listeners rated Dutch laughter as being the most positive of all.<br><br>The findings, the team explained, add to mounting evidence that laughter is a rich vocal signal that listeners can use to make various inferences about other people. <br>Scroll down for videos<br> Both Dutch and Japanese people can recognise their fellow countrymen by listening to the sound of their laughter alone, a study has concluded<br> <div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS sciencetech" data-version="2" id="mol-6ca160a0-46d0-11ec-aff9-47ad8f75dff9" website and Japanese people recognise their countrymen from laughter'
] |