Joint press release by
Ruhr-Universität Bochum and Vrije Universiteit Brussel, 7/26/17
Amphibians, reptiles, mammals --
all of them communicate via acoustic signals. And humans are able to assess the
emotional value of these signals. This has been shown in a new study conducted
by researchers at Vrije Universiteit Brussel and Ruhr-Universität Bochum, in
collaboration with colleagues from Alberta, Canada, and Vienna, Austria, in the
journal "Proceedings of the Royal Society B". They interpreted these
findings as evidence that there might be a universal code for the vocal
expression and perception of emotions in the animal kingdom. Previous studies
had demonstrated that humans are capable of identifying emotions in the voices
of different mammals. The new study results have been expanded to include
amphibians and reptiles.
The team headed by Dr Piera
Filippi, currently at the University of Aix-Marseille and the Max Planck
Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands, included, amongst others,
three academics from Bochum: philosophy scholar Prof Dr Albert Newen, biopsychologist
Prof Dr Dr h. c. Onur Güntürkün and assistant professor Dr Sebastian
Ocklenburg.
Animal voices for different
classes of vertebrates
Participants in the study
included 75 individuals whose native language was English, German or Mandarin.
They listened to audio recordings of nine different species of land-living
vertebrates in the classes mammals, amphibians and reptiles, with the latter
including birds and other reptiles.
Participants were able to
distinguish between high and low levels of arousal in the acoustic signals of
all animal classes. To do so, they mainly relied on frequency-related
parameters in the signal.
"The findings suggest that
fundamental mechanisms for the acoustic expression of emotions exist across all
classes of vertebrates," conclude the authors. The evolutionary roots of
this signal system might be shared by all vocalizing vertebrates. This finding
goes in the direction of what Charles Darwin suggested more than a century ago,
namely that acoustic expressions of emotion can be traced back to our earliest
land-dwelling ancestors.
Audio files online
Recordings of low and high
arousal calls of different animals can be found online at: http://news.rub.de/english/press-releases/2017-07-26-evolution-humans-identify-emotions-voices-all-air-breathing-vertebrates
Funding
The collaboration between Piera
Filippi and the researchers from Bochum was realised thanks to a fellowship
that was awarded by the Center for Mind, Brain and Cognitive Evolution in
Bochum.
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