Hauser Md, Agnetta B, Perez C
Department of Psychology, Harvard University
Anim Behav. 1998 Jul;56(1):41-7. doi: 10.1006/anbe.1998.0738.
Humans exhibit left-hemisphere dominance for processing spoken language, a species-specific acoustic signal characterized by a suite of spectro-temporal parameters. Some nonhuman primates (genus Macaca) also exhibit left-hemisphere dominance for processing their species-specific vocalizations, as evidenced by right-ear biases in orienting and reaction-time studies, and more damaging effects from left- than right-hemisphere lesions. Little, however, is known about the acoustic features underlying such biases. We conducted field playback experiments on adult rhesus monkeys, Macaca mulatta, to determine whether asymmetries in perception (measured as an orienting bias) are sensitive to changes in the temporal characteristics of their calls. If the observed right-ear bias for perceiving conspecific calls (Hauser & Andersson 1994, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A., 91, 3946-3948) depends upon particular acoustic parameters, then experimental manipulations beyond the species-typical range of signal variation will cause a change in perceptual asymmetry, either reversing the pattern (i.e. right to left ear ) or wiping it out (i.e. no asymmetry). We presented manipulated and unmanipulated exemplars of three pulsatile call types within the rhesus repertoire: an affiliative signal 'grunt', an alarm signal 'shrill bark', and a mating signal 'copulation scream'. Signal manipulations involved either (1) a reduction of the interpulse interval to zero or the population minimum or (2) an expansion of the interpulse interval to the population maximum, or two times the maximum. For the grunt and shrill bark, manipulations of interpulse interval outside the range of natural variation either eliminated the orienting bias or caused a shift from right- to left-ear bias. For the copulation scream, however, a right-ear bias was observed in response to all stimuli, manipulated and unmanipulated. Results show that for some call types within the repertoire, temporal properties such as interpulse interval provide significant information to listeners about whether the signal is from a conspecific or not. We interpret the orienting bias as evidence that hemispheric asymmetries underly this perceptual effect.Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
人类在处理口语时表现出左半球优势,口语是一种具有一系列频谱 - 时间参数的特定物种的声学信号。一些非人类灵长类动物(猕猴属)在处理其特定物种的发声时也表现出左半球优势,这在定向和反应时间研究中的右耳偏好以及左半球损伤比右半球损伤造成的更严重影响中得到了证明。然而,对于这种偏好背后的声学特征知之甚少。我们对成年恒河猴(猕猴)进行了野外回放实验,以确定感知上的不对称性(以定向偏好来衡量)是否对其叫声的时间特征变化敏感。如果观察到的感知同种叫声的右耳偏好(豪泽和安德森,1994年,《美国国家科学院院刊》,91卷,3946 - 3948页)取决于特定的声学参数,那么超出信号变化的物种典型范围的实验操作将导致感知不对称性的变化,要么使模式反转(即从右耳到左耳),要么消除这种不对称性(即没有不对称性)。我们展示了恒河猴叫声库中三种脉冲叫声类型的经过处理和未处理的样本:一种亲和信号“咕噜声”、一种警报信号“尖锐叫声”和一种交配信号“交配尖叫”。信号处理包括要么(1)将脉冲间隔缩短到零或群体最小值,要么(2)将脉冲间隔扩展到群体最大值,或者最大值的两倍。对于咕噜声和尖锐叫声,超出自然变化范围的脉冲间隔处理要么消除了定向偏好,要么导致从右耳偏好向左耳偏好的转变。然而,对于交配尖叫,对所有经过处理和未处理的刺激都观察到了右耳偏好。结果表明,对于叫声库中的某些叫声类型,诸如脉冲间隔等时间特性为听众提供了关于信号是否来自同种个体的重要信息。我们将定向偏好解释为半球不对称性是这种感知效应基础的证据。版权所有1998年动物行为研究协会。