Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees

Humans acoustically encode affective information into their utterances. This ability, known as ‘affective prosody’, takes pre-linguistic roots and plays an important role in human communication throughout the lifespan by enabling listeners to disambiguate the meaning of speakers’ utterances. Adoptin...

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Main Authors: Derry Taylor, Guillaume Dezecache, Marina Davila-Ross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société Francophone de Primatologie 2023-03-01
Series:Revue de Primatologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/14376
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author Derry Taylor
Guillaume Dezecache
Marina Davila-Ross
author_facet Derry Taylor
Guillaume Dezecache
Marina Davila-Ross
author_sort Derry Taylor
collection DOAJ
description Humans acoustically encode affective information into their utterances. This ability, known as ‘affective prosody’, takes pre-linguistic roots and plays an important role in human communication throughout the lifespan by enabling listeners to disambiguate the meaning of speakers’ utterances. Adopting a comparative-developmental perspective, we ask whether such an ability may also be present in the vocalisations of young chimpanzees. We examine the acoustic characteristics of grunt vocalisations known to be related to affective expression in other non-human species and show that grunts produced during positive, neutral, and negative contexts can indeed be distinguished on this acoustic basis. Further, our data provide new and unexpected insights into ontogenetic constraints in chimpanzee vocal production, finding that almost all acoustic parameters in early chimpanzee grunts are strongly correlated. We conclude that affective prosody is likely a characteristic of young chimpanzee vocal behaviour and speculate that affect may be more flexibly expressed through call acoustics with increasing age as chimpanzees gain greater control over their vocal apparatus.
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spelling doaj-art-22c1873d03e64c75a3ef41965bf508f42025-01-30T10:01:38ZengSociété Francophone de PrimatologieRevue de Primatologie2077-37572023-03-0113Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzeesDerry TaylorGuillaume DezecacheMarina Davila-RossHumans acoustically encode affective information into their utterances. This ability, known as ‘affective prosody’, takes pre-linguistic roots and plays an important role in human communication throughout the lifespan by enabling listeners to disambiguate the meaning of speakers’ utterances. Adopting a comparative-developmental perspective, we ask whether such an ability may also be present in the vocalisations of young chimpanzees. We examine the acoustic characteristics of grunt vocalisations known to be related to affective expression in other non-human species and show that grunts produced during positive, neutral, and negative contexts can indeed be distinguished on this acoustic basis. Further, our data provide new and unexpected insights into ontogenetic constraints in chimpanzee vocal production, finding that almost all acoustic parameters in early chimpanzee grunts are strongly correlated. We conclude that affective prosody is likely a characteristic of young chimpanzee vocal behaviour and speculate that affect may be more flexibly expressed through call acoustics with increasing age as chimpanzees gain greater control over their vocal apparatus.https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/14376Chimpanzeeontogenyaffectgrunt
spellingShingle Derry Taylor
Guillaume Dezecache
Marina Davila-Ross
Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
Revue de Primatologie
Chimpanzee
ontogeny
affect
grunt
title Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
title_full Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
title_fullStr Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
title_full_unstemmed Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
title_short Affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
title_sort affective prosody in grunts of young chimpanzees
topic Chimpanzee
ontogeny
affect
grunt
url https://journals.openedition.org/primatologie/14376
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AT marinadavilaross affectiveprosodyingruntsofyoungchimpanzees