MTA-ELTE "Lendület" Neuroethology of Communication Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences - Eötvös Loránd University, 1/C Pázmány Péter sétány, Budapest, 1117, Hungary.
Department of Ethology, Eötvös Loránd University, 1/C Pázmány Péter sétány, Budapest, 1117, Hungary.
Anim Cogn. 2022 Aug;25(4):905-916. doi: 10.1007/s10071-022-01601-z. Epub 2022 Feb 10.
Speech carries identity-diagnostic acoustic cues that help individuals recognize each other during vocal-social interactions. In humans, fundamental frequency, formant dispersion and harmonics-to-noise ratio serve as characteristics along which speakers can be reliably separated. The ability to infer a speaker's identity is also adaptive for members of other species (like companion animals) for whom humans (as owners) are relevant. The acoustic bases of speaker recognition in non-humans are unknown. Here, we tested whether dogs can recognize their owner's voice and whether they rely on the same acoustic parameters for such recognition as humans use to discriminate speakers. Stimuli were pre-recorded sentences spoken by the owner and control persons, played through loudspeakers placed behind two non-transparent screens (with each screen hiding a person). We investigated the association between acoustic distance of speakers (examined along several dimensions relevant in intraspecific voice identification) and dogs' behavior. Dogs chose their owner's voice more often than that of control persons', suggesting that they can identify it. Choosing success and time spent looking in the direction of the owner's voice were positively associated, showing that looking time is an index of the ease of choice. Acoustic distance of speakers in mean fundamental frequency and jitter were positively associated with looking time, indicating that the shorter the acoustic distance between speakers with regard to these parameters, the harder the decision. So, dogs use these cues to discriminate their owner's voice from unfamiliar voices. These findings reveal that dogs use some but probably not all acoustic parameters that humans use to identify speakers. Although dogs can detect fine changes in speech, their perceptual system may not be fully attuned to identity-diagnostic cues in the human voice.
语音携带有身份诊断性的声学线索,这些线索有助于个体在发声社交互动中相互识别。在人类中,基频、共振峰离散度和谐噪比等特征可用于可靠地区分说话者。推断说话者身份的能力对于其他物种(如伴侣动物)的成员也是适应的,因为人类(作为主人)对它们来说很重要。非人类物种中说话者识别的声学基础尚不清楚。在这里,我们测试了狗是否能识别它们主人的声音,以及它们是否依赖于与人类用于区分说话者相同的声学参数来进行识别。刺激物是主人和控制者预先录制的句子,通过放置在两个不透明屏幕后面的扬声器播放(每个屏幕后面隐藏一个人)。我们研究了说话者之间的声学距离(沿着与种内语音识别相关的几个维度进行检查)与狗行为之间的关联。狗更多地选择它们主人的声音而不是控制者的声音,这表明它们能够识别它。选择成功和花在主人声音方向上的时间呈正相关,这表明花在寻找方向上的时间是选择难易程度的指标。说话者的平均基频和抖动的声学距离与注视时间呈正相关,这表明这些参数之间的说话者声学距离越短,决策越困难。因此,狗使用这些线索来区分它们主人的声音和不熟悉的声音。这些发现表明,狗使用一些但可能不是人类用于识别说话者的所有声学参数。尽管狗可以检测到语音中的细微变化,但它们的感知系统可能不完全适应人类语音中的身份诊断性线索。