Petersen M R, Beecher M D, Zoloth S R, Moody D B, Stebbins W C
Science. 1978 Oct 20;202(4365):324-7. doi: 10.1126/science.99817.
Five Japanese macaques and five other Old World monkeys were trained to discriminate among field-recorded Japanese macaque vocalizations. One task required discrimination of a communicatively relevant acoustic feature ("peak"), and a second required discrimination of an orthogonal feature of the same vocalizations ("pitch"). The Japanese animals more proficiently discriminated the peak feature when stimuli were presented to the right ear (primarily left cerebral hemisphere), as opposed to the left ear (primarily right hemisphere). In discriminating the pitch feature, the Japanese animals either showed (i) a left-ear processing advantage or (ii) no ear advantage. The comparison animals, with one exception, showed no ear advantage in processing either feature of the vocalizations. The results suggest that Japanese macaques engage left-hemisphere processors for the analysis of communicatively significant sounds that are analogous to the lateralized mechanisms used by humans listening to speech.
五只日本猕猴和五只其他旧世界猴接受训练,以区分现场录制的日本猕猴叫声。一项任务要求区分一个具有交流相关性的声学特征(“峰值”),另一项任务要求区分相同叫声的一个正交特征(“音高”)。当刺激呈现给右耳(主要是左脑半球)而非左耳(主要是右脑半球)时,日本猕猴能更熟练地区分峰值特征。在区分音高特征时,日本猕猴要么表现出(i)左耳处理优势,要么表现出(ii)无耳优势。除一只外,比较组动物在处理叫声的任何一个特征时均未表现出耳优势。结果表明,日本猕猴利用左脑半球处理器来分析具有交流意义的声音,这类似于人类听语音时使用的偏侧化机制。