Two experiments investigated the role of intonation in perception of basic emotions. In the first experiment, pitch contours of stimuli from a corpus containing portrayals of anger, joy, fear and sadness were manipulated with respect to range, mean and smoothness. In the second experiment, pitch contours of identical words portraying different emotions were exchanged. In each experiment, the emotional cate- gory and intensity of the original and manipulated stimuli were evaluated by two separate groups of 20 participants. Results of the first experiment show mainly that pitch mean and range should vary congruently to portray activation correctly, and demonstrate the interaction in varying these two parameters. Results of the second experiment show that a pitch contour conveying high activation is not sufficient in conveying the appropriate emotion, if the other paralinguistic cues are not also in accordance. A pitch contour indicating low activation, on the other hand, is apparently a more powerful cue and thus less reliant on other cues.