Schopf Christian, Schmidt Sabine, Zimmermann Elke
Institute of Zoology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Foundation , Hannover , Germany.
PeerJ. 2016 Aug 16;4:e2328. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2328. eCollection 2016.
When exposed to enhanced background noise, humans avoid signal masking by increasing the amplitude of the voice, a phenomenon termed the Lombard effect. This auditory feedback-mediated voice control has also been found in monkeys, bats, cetaceans, fish and some frogs and birds. We studied the Lombard effect for the first time in a phylogenetically basal primate, the grey mouse lemur, Microcebus murinus. When background noise was increased, mouse lemurs were able to raise the amplitude of the voice, comparable to monkeys, but they did not show this effect consistently across context/individuals. The Lombard effect, even if representing a generic vocal communication system property of mammals, may thus be affected by more complex mechanisms. The present findings emphasize an effect of context, and individual, and the need for further standardized approaches to disentangle the multiple system properties of mammalian vocal communication, important for understanding the evolution of the unique human faculty of speech and language.
当暴露于增强的背景噪音中时,人类会通过增加声音的振幅来避免信号掩蔽,这种现象被称为伦巴德效应。这种由听觉反馈介导的声音控制在猴子、蝙蝠、鲸类、鱼类以及一些青蛙和鸟类中也有发现。我们首次在系统发育上处于基础地位的灵长类动物——灰鼠狐猴(Microcebus murinus)中研究了伦巴德效应。当背景噪音增加时,鼠狐猴能够像猴子一样提高声音的振幅,但它们在不同情境/个体中并非始终表现出这种效应。因此,伦巴德效应即使代表了哺乳动物通用的声音交流系统特性,也可能受到更复杂机制的影响。目前的研究结果强调了情境和个体的影响,以及需要进一步采用标准化方法来理清哺乳动物声音交流的多种系统特性,这对于理解人类独特的言语和语言能力的进化很重要。