Institut für Zellbiologie und Neurowissenschaft, Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt/M., Germany.
Zoology II Emmy-Noether Animal Navigation Group, Biocenter, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2020 Apr 30;10(1):7332. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-64323-7.
Communication sounds are ubiquitous in the animal kingdom, where they play a role in advertising physiological states and/or socio-contextual scenarios. Human screams, for example, are typically uttered in fearful contexts and they have a distinctive feature termed as "roughness", which depicts amplitude fluctuations at rates from 30-150 Hz. In this article, we report that the occurrence of fast acoustic periodicities in harsh sounding vocalizations is not unique to humans. A roughness-like structure is also present in vocalizations emitted by bats (species Carollia perspicillata) in distressful contexts. We report that 47.7% of distress calls produced by bats carry amplitude fluctuations at rates ~1.7 kHz (>10 times faster than temporal modulations found in human screams). In bats, rough-like vocalizations entrain brain potentials and are more effective in accelerating the bats' heart rate than slow amplitude modulated sounds. Our results are consistent with a putative role of fast amplitude modulations (roughness in humans) for grabbing the listeners attention in situations in which the emitter is in distressful, potentially dangerous, contexts.
在动物王国中,通讯声音无处不在,它们在宣传生理状态和/或社会背景场景中发挥作用。例如,人类的尖叫声通常在恐惧的环境中发出,它们具有一种称为“粗糙度”的独特特征,描绘了速率为 30-150 Hz 的幅度波动。在本文中,我们报告说,在刺耳的发声中出现快速的声学周期性并不是人类所独有的。在处于困境中的蝙蝠(Carollia perspicillata 物种)发出的发声中也存在类似粗糙度的结构。我们报告说,蝙蝠产生的 47.7%的求救叫声具有约 1.7 kHz 的幅度波动速率(比人类尖叫声中的时间调制快 10 多倍)。在蝙蝠中,类似粗糙的发声会引发脑电波,并且比缓慢的幅度调制声音更有效地加速蝙蝠的心率。我们的结果与快速幅度调制(人类的粗糙度)在 emitter 处于困境、潜在危险的情况下吸引听众注意力的假设作用一致。