Department of Basic Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Aix-Marseille University and CNRS, Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive (UMR 7290), Marseille, France.
PLoS Biol. 2024 Oct 1;22(10):e3002789. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002789. eCollection 2024 Oct.
Within species, vocal and auditory systems presumably coevolved to converge on a critical temporal acoustic structure that can be best produced and perceived. While dogs cannot produce articulated sounds, they respond to speech, raising the question as to whether this heterospecific receptive ability could be shaped by exposure to speech or remains bounded by their own sensorimotor capacity. Using acoustic analyses of dog vocalisations, we show that their main production rhythm is slower than the dominant (syllabic) speech rate, and that human-dog-directed speech falls halfway in between. Comparative exploration of neural (electroencephalography) and behavioural responses to speech reveals that comprehension in dogs relies on a slower speech rhythm tracking (delta) than humans' (theta), even though dogs are equally sensitive to speech content and prosody. Thus, the dog audio-motor tuning differs from humans', and we hypothesise that humans may adjust their speech rate to this shared temporal channel as means to improve communication efficacy.
在物种内部,声音和听觉系统可能是共同进化的,以收敛到一个最佳产生和感知的关键时间声学结构。虽然狗不能发出清晰的声音,但它们会对言语做出反应,这就提出了一个问题,即这种种间接受能力是否可以通过接触言语来塑造,或者是否仍然受到其自身感觉运动能力的限制。通过对狗叫声的声学分析,我们发现它们的主要产生节奏比主导的(音节)言语速度慢,而人类与狗之间的言语则介于两者之间。对言语的神经(脑电图)和行为反应的比较探索表明,狗对言语的理解依赖于比人类(theta)更慢的言语节奏跟踪(delta),尽管狗对言语内容和韵律同样敏感。因此,狗的音频-运动调谐与人类不同,我们假设人类可能会调整他们的言语速度以适应这种共享的时间通道,作为提高沟通效果的手段。