Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution

Isochrony, or the regular timing of sounds, is a prominent rhythmic feature of human music and can also be found in the vocalisations of non-human animals. In the evolution of music and language, the capacity for vocal learning is hypothesised to have played a key role, with vocal learning species...

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Main Authors: Julia V. Grabner, Anna E. Kempf, Alma M. N. Nederlof, Judith M. Varkevisser, Michelle J. Spierings
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Rijeka 2025-04-01
Series:Psychological Topics
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Online Access:https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/1098
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author Julia V. Grabner
Anna E. Kempf
Alma M. N. Nederlof
Judith M. Varkevisser
Michelle J. Spierings
author_facet Julia V. Grabner
Anna E. Kempf
Alma M. N. Nederlof
Judith M. Varkevisser
Michelle J. Spierings
author_sort Julia V. Grabner
collection DOAJ
description Isochrony, or the regular timing of sounds, is a prominent rhythmic feature of human music and can also be found in the vocalisations of non-human animals. In the evolution of music and language, the capacity for vocal learning is hypothesised to have played a key role, with vocal learning species thought to have more advanced rhythmic capabilities. However, studies show that vocal isochrony is also present in vocal non-learners, indicating that it is perhaps a highly conserved property providing adaptive benefits across taxa. As mechanisms that are shared across multiple species are likely to have been the bedrocks of our current abilities, comparative research into vocal isochrony can give clues on how rhythms in human music and language might have evolved, even though modern speech is not typically isochronous. This review summarises possible adaptive functions of vocal isochrony by describing its presence across different species and call types found in recent research. Thus, it represents a narrative synthesis of the adaptive functions of vocal isochrony. Here, we highlight three major possible functions of vocal isochrony: firstly, isochrony could improve communication by enhancing signal transmission from one individual and auditory detection by others and possibly function in conveying meaning. Secondly, vocal isochrony could inform others about mate quality, indicating a role in sexual selection. Lastly, isochrony could facilitate vocal coordination between two or more individuals, as the predictability of isochrony can help individuals to adjust the timing of their vocalisations to each other more readily. These functions seem to be highly intercorrelated, which might provide clues for the evolution of human music and speech.
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spelling doaj-art-5cb9e2c341c74ae99a8256c42f9bd88e2025-08-20T03:18:03ZengUniversity of RijekaPsychological Topics1332-07421849-03952025-04-01341Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language EvolutionJulia V. Grabner0Anna E. Kempf1Alma M. N. Nederlof2Judith M. Varkevisser3Michelle J. Spierings4University of Vienna, Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, Vienna, AustriaUniversity of Vienna, Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, Vienna, AustriaUniversity of Utrecht, Department of Animal Behaviour and Cognition, Utrecht, The NetherlandsLeiden University, Animal Sciences, Institute of Biology, Leiden, The NetherlandsUniversity of Vienna, Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Biology, Vienna, Austria; Leiden University, Animal Sciences, Institute of Biology, Leiden, The Netherlands Isochrony, or the regular timing of sounds, is a prominent rhythmic feature of human music and can also be found in the vocalisations of non-human animals. In the evolution of music and language, the capacity for vocal learning is hypothesised to have played a key role, with vocal learning species thought to have more advanced rhythmic capabilities. However, studies show that vocal isochrony is also present in vocal non-learners, indicating that it is perhaps a highly conserved property providing adaptive benefits across taxa. As mechanisms that are shared across multiple species are likely to have been the bedrocks of our current abilities, comparative research into vocal isochrony can give clues on how rhythms in human music and language might have evolved, even though modern speech is not typically isochronous. This review summarises possible adaptive functions of vocal isochrony by describing its presence across different species and call types found in recent research. Thus, it represents a narrative synthesis of the adaptive functions of vocal isochrony. Here, we highlight three major possible functions of vocal isochrony: firstly, isochrony could improve communication by enhancing signal transmission from one individual and auditory detection by others and possibly function in conveying meaning. Secondly, vocal isochrony could inform others about mate quality, indicating a role in sexual selection. Lastly, isochrony could facilitate vocal coordination between two or more individuals, as the predictability of isochrony can help individuals to adjust the timing of their vocalisations to each other more readily. These functions seem to be highly intercorrelated, which might provide clues for the evolution of human music and speech. https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/1098vocal isochronyrhythmmusic evolutionlanguage evolutioncomparative cognition
spellingShingle Julia V. Grabner
Anna E. Kempf
Alma M. N. Nederlof
Judith M. Varkevisser
Michelle J. Spierings
Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution
Psychological Topics
vocal isochrony
rhythm
music evolution
language evolution
comparative cognition
title Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution
title_full Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution
title_fullStr Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution
title_full_unstemmed Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution
title_short Rhythmic Roots: The Adaptive Functions of Vocal Isochrony and Its Role in Human Music and Language Evolution
title_sort rhythmic roots the adaptive functions of vocal isochrony and its role in human music and language evolution
topic vocal isochrony
rhythm
music evolution
language evolution
comparative cognition
url https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/1098
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