Bioacoustics Laboratory, Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Djerassiplatz 1, Vienna 1030, Austria; Janette Ogg Voice Research Center, Shenandoah Conservatory, 1460 University Drive, Winchester, VA 22601, USA.
Institute of Morphology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Veterinärplatz 1, Vienna 1210, Austria.
Curr Biol. 2023 Nov 6;33(21):4727-4732.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.09.014. Epub 2023 Oct 3.
Most mammals produce vocal sounds according to the myoelastic-aerodynamic (MEAD) principle, through self-sustaining oscillation of laryngeal tissues. In contrast, cats have long been believed to produce their low-frequency purr vocalizations through a radically different mechanism involving active muscle contractions (AMC), where neurally driven electromyographic burst patterns (typically at 20-30 Hz) cause the intrinsic laryngeal muscles to actively modulate the respiratory airflow. Direct empirical evidence for this AMC mechanism is sparse. Here, the fundamental frequency (f) ranges of eight domestic cats (Felis silvestris catus) were investigated in an excised larynx setup, to test the prediction of the AMC hypothesis that vibration should be impossible without neuromuscular activity, and thus unattainable in excised larynx setups, which are based on MEAD principles. Surprisingly, all eight excised larynges produced self-sustained oscillations at typical cat purring rates. Histological analysis of cat larynges revealed the presence of connective tissue masses, up to 4 mm in diameter, embedded in the vocal fold. This vocal fold specialization appears to allow the unusually low f values observed in purring. While our data do not fully reject the AMC hypothesis for purring, they show that cat larynges can easily produce sounds in the purr regime with fundamental frequencies of 25 to 30 Hz without neural input or muscular contraction. This strongly suggests that the physical and physiological basis of cat purring involves the same MEAD-based mechanisms as other cat vocalizations (e.g., meows) and most other vertebrate vocalizations but is potentially augmented by AMC.
大多数哺乳动物根据肌弹性气动(MEAD)原理产生声音,通过喉组织的自维持振荡。相比之下,长期以来人们认为猫通过一种截然不同的机制产生其低频呼噜声,该机制涉及主动肌肉收缩(AMC),其中神经驱动的肌电图爆发模式(通常为 20-30 Hz)导致内在的喉肌主动调节呼吸气流。这种 AMC 机制的直接经验证据很少。在这里,在离体喉设置中研究了八只家猫(Felis silvestris catus)的基频(f)范围,以检验 AMC 假设的预测,即没有神经肌肉活动就不可能发生振动,因此在基于 MEAD 原理的离体喉设置中是无法实现的。令人惊讶的是,所有八个离体喉都以典型的猫呼噜声速率产生了自维持振荡。对猫喉的组织学分析显示存在结缔组织肿块,直径可达 4 毫米,嵌入声带。这种声带特化似乎允许在呼噜声中观察到异常低的 f 值。虽然我们的数据并没有完全否定 AMC 假设,但它们表明猫喉可以在没有神经输入或肌肉收缩的情况下,很容易在呼噜声范围内产生频率为 25 到 30 Hz 的声音。这强烈表明,猫呼噜声的物理和生理基础与其他猫叫声(例如,喵喵声)和大多数其他脊椎动物叫声所涉及的相同 MEAD 机制有关,但可能通过 AMC 得到增强。