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Analysis of avian 'speech' : patterns and productionScanlan, James Patrick January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of vocal communication in the biology of fledgling and juvenile kea (nestor notabilis) in Aoraki/Mount Cook National ParkArmstrong, Debbie Maree January 2004 (has links)
The kea is the only parrot species in the world to include the true alpine environment as part of their habitat. Survival in these harsh alpine conditions has been hypothesised to be the cause of the generalist behaviour of kea, leading to their heightened explorative behaviour and curiosity. Kea are also widely regarded as being extraordinarily intelligent. It is their intelligence that suggests that kea may possess a sophisticated communication system. I conducted a study exploring the potentially complex vocal repertoire of the kea. My study was conducted with wild population of banded juvenile and fledgling kea in Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park between February 2003 and April 2004. I obtained 449 vocalisations from 16 identified and several unidentified kea. The results of this study confirmed that the vocal repertoire of the kea is exceptionally large for a parrot species, encompassing over 17 vocalisations. This study revealed five vocalisations previously undescribed in the kea repertoire and showed for the first time that vocal repertoire of immature kea may be different to the repertoire of adult kea. Two possible gender specific vocalisations were also revealed. The study of apparent vocal responses revealed that kea appear to be able to identify vocalisation types and respond accordingly using combinations of increasingly complex vocalisations. This is also the first study to take advantage of the similarity between human and parrot vocal systems for the kea, by utilizing powerful human speech analysis software. The results of this analysis allowed the identification of subtle differences in kea vocalisations, including the presence of graded signals, not identifiable by use of spectrogram analysis.
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The role of vocal communication in the biology of fledgling and juvenile kea (nestor notabilis) in Aoraki/Mount Cook National ParkArmstrong, Debbie Maree January 2004 (has links)
The kea is the only parrot species in the world to include the true alpine environment as part of their habitat. Survival in these harsh alpine conditions has been hypothesised to be the cause of the generalist behaviour of kea, leading to their heightened explorative behaviour and curiosity. Kea are also widely regarded as being extraordinarily intelligent. It is their intelligence that suggests that kea may possess a sophisticated communication system. I conducted a study exploring the potentially complex vocal repertoire of the kea. My study was conducted with wild population of banded juvenile and fledgling kea in Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park between February 2003 and April 2004. I obtained 449 vocalisations from 16 identified and several unidentified kea. The results of this study confirmed that the vocal repertoire of the kea is exceptionally large for a parrot species, encompassing over 17 vocalisations. This study revealed five vocalisations previously undescribed in the kea repertoire and showed for the first time that vocal repertoire of immature kea may be different to the repertoire of adult kea. Two possible gender specific vocalisations were also revealed. The study of apparent vocal responses revealed that kea appear to be able to identify vocalisation types and respond accordingly using combinations of increasingly complex vocalisations. This is also the first study to take advantage of the similarity between human and parrot vocal systems for the kea, by utilizing powerful human speech analysis software. The results of this analysis allowed the identification of subtle differences in kea vocalisations, including the presence of graded signals, not identifiable by use of spectrogram analysis.
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Grunt usage and social monitoring: Investigation of the signaller and the receiver perspectives in a tolerant species of baboonsFaraut, Lauriane 04 February 2019 (has links)
La compréhension des sociétés, de la communication et de la cognition chez les primates non humains permet de mieux comprendre l'évolution de notre propre espèce. Bien que la structure acoustique chez les primates soit principalement innée, leur utilisation vocale et leur compréhension / réponse sont plus flexibles et fluctuent en fonction des expériences sociales. Comme les relations peuvent varier entre les individus d’un même groupe et changer avec le temps, les contextes d’utilisation des vocalisations (perspective du signaleur) et les schémas de réponse aux vocalisations (perspective du récepteur) sont supposés différer même entre espèces très proches.
Mon projet de thèse s'inscrit dans le cadre actuel déterminant dans quelle mesure le système social façonne la communication et la cognition sociale chez les primates. Plus spécifiquement, j’ai étudié l’utilisation d’une vocalisation affiliative — le grognement — et la surveillance sociale d’une population sauvage de babouins de Guinée (Papio papio) vivant dans le parc national du Niokolo Koba, au Sénégal. En combinant des observations comportementales et des designs expérimentaux, je me suis attachée à investir le point de vue du signaleur et du receveur en utilisant le grognement, la vocalisation affiliative la plus commune chez les babouins. Les babouins de savane (P. ursinus, P. cynocephalus, P. kinda, P. anubis) vivent dans des groupes polygynandres caractérisés par une forte compétition entre males et des relations sociales stables entre femelles. A l’inverse, l’organisation sociale des babouins de Guinée et hamadryas (P. hamadryas) est caractérisée par une société à plusieurs niveaux, une dispersion majoritaire des femelles et un système reproductif polygyny-monandre. Chez le babouin de Guinée, « l’unité » — i.e., un mâle « primaire », 1-6 femelle, leur progéniture, et fréquemment des mâles « secondaires » — représente le cœur de la société, et l’agglomération de plusieurs unités s’appelle le « parti ». Les mâles sont majoritairement philopatriques au sein d’un parti et partage une grande tolérance spatiale, facilitant la formation de liens sociaux forts et durables.
Afin d’évaluer si le système social du babouin de Guinée influence leur utilisation du grognement, j’ai collecté des observations comportementales de mâles et de femelles sexuellement matures. Tout d’abord, j'ai examiné si la nature des interactions suite à une approche était modulée par la production de grognements par l'animal approchant (i.e., le sujet). A la suite d’une approche avec grognement chez les deux sexes, la dyade était plus susceptible d’interagir de manière affiliative. De plus, les grognements augmentaient la probabilité de manipulation du nourrisson du partenaire et réduisaient le risque de supplantation. Par la suite, j'ai testé comment un nourrisson à proximité du receveur et la qualité des liens sociaux entre partenaires pouvaient potentiellement influencer la décision du sujet à grogner ou rester silencieux. Les deux sexes étaient plus susceptibles de grogner envers un partenaire féminin que masculin. Entre femelles, la probabilité d’émission vocale était plus faible lorsqu’elles partageaient de forts liens sociaux, et ceci uniquement en présence d’un nourrisson avec sa partenaire. L’appartenance à une unité a également eu un impact sur le grognement, car les femmes étaient plus susceptibles de vocaliser lorsqu'elles approchent une femme d'une autre unité. Le statut de dominance et l’écart entre rang hiérarchique dyadique n’altéraient pas la probabilité de grognement entre femelles, même si une hiérarchie de dominance linéaire a été démontrée. En accord avec la tolérance élevée chez les mâles de cette espèce, la force des liens sociaux n'a eu aucun impact sur la probabilité de grogner lors d'approches entre mâles. Enfin, les mâles étaient plus prompts à grogner lorsqu'un nourrisson était à proximité du partenaire féminin. Dans l’ensemble, ces résultats indiquent que les babouins de Guinée utilisent les grognements de manière stratégique pour faire connaître leurs intentions bénigne lors de situations imprévisibles spécifiques (par exemple, en s’approchant d’un partenaire non préférentiel). Bien que les contraintes génétiques limitent la structure et l'étendue du répertoire vocal au sein d’un même taxon, les babouins peuvent adapter leur utilisation vocale de manière flexible en fonction de leur environnement social.
Dans une seconde étude, j'ai exploré le point de vue du receveur en testant l'attention portée aux interactions sociales de tiers chez les mâles adultes babouins de Guinée. J'ai pratiqué des expériences de repasse pour déterminer si les mâles suivaient les associations actuelles entre mâles et femelles au sein de leur parti (mais en dehors de leur propre unité). Tout d’abord, j'ai démontré que les grognements sont exprimés plus fréquemment entre femelles et mâles primaires d'une même unité que d'unités différentes. Par la suite, j'ai réalisé des séquences acoustiques congruentes et incongrues simulant un échange de grognements entre une femelle et un mâle primaire appartenant respectivement à la même unité ou non. J’ai testé ces séquences de grognements sur des mâles primaires et des mâles non primaires, comme le statut des mâles (association avec une femelle) pourrait influencer la valeur des informations sociales. Étonnamment, les babouins mâles regardaient plus longtemps vers le hautparleur lorsqu’ils étaient exposés à la condition congruente par rapport à la condition incongrue, un résultat opposé à une précédente expérience de repasse chez le mâle babouin chacma. De plus, les mâles primaires réagissaient plus fortement que les mâles non primaires, quel que soit la condition expérimentale. Ainsi, ces résultats révèlent comment les différences du système reproductif et du degré de compétition entre mâles affectent la valeur allouée aux informations sociales même entre espèces génétiquement proches.
En comparant mes résultats avec la littérature chez les geladas et d’autres espèces de babouins, les variations observées lors de l'utilisation de vocalisations et la motivation à suivre les interactions des autres chez les babouins de Guinée sont susceptibles d'être liées à des caractéristiques propres à leur système social. Bien que les babouins de Guinée utilisent des grognements de manière stratégique pour signaler leur intention bienveillante, comme c’est le cas chez plusieurs autres espèces de primates, l’absence de significativité de la force des liens sociaux entre males et males-femelles, ainsi que de la hiérarchie de dominance féminine sur la production de grognements pourrait être liée au faible niveau de compétition observé à la fois entre ou au sein d’un même sexe chez cette espèce. Compte tenu du faible intérêt que suscitent les enregistrements simulant des associations incongrues entre femelles et mâles, mes expériences de repasse supportent que l'attribution de l'attention sociale — et potentiellement l’étendue des connaissances sociales — dépend fortement du système reproductif et du degré de compétition/tolérance entre congénères. De futures recherches devraient considérer un ensemble de mesures révélant comment la compétition, la cohésion et la coopération impact potentiellement l’évolution de la communication et de la cognition. De plus, le développement de recherches comparatives entre espèces ou populations confrontées à des fluctuations des différentes dimensions du système social est primordial, sachant que l’environnement social semble expliquer davantage de variation entre espèces que les relations génétiques
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Bioacoustic analyses of the chick-a-dee call of the Mexican chickadee (Poecile sclateri) and the boreal chickadee (Poecile hudsonica)Moscicki, Michele Unknown Date
No description available.
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Bioacoustic analyses of the chick-a-dee call of the Mexican chickadee (Poecile sclateri) and the boreal chickadee (Poecile hudsonica)Moscicki, Michele 11 1900 (has links)
To understand the communicative functions of any vocalization it is important to first classify, describe, and measure the elements of that vocalization. Mexican (Poecile sclateri) and boreal (P. hudsonica) chickadees both produce a name-sake chick-a-dee call. Here, the note types present in samples of Mexican and boreal chick-a-dee calls are identified and described. Frequency and temporal measures of each note type are analyzed and show that frequency measures may be useful for note-type and individual discrimination. Call syntax is also analyzed and shows that both Mexican and boreal chickadees produce the notes within their chick-a-dee calls in a fixed order with the potential for any note type to be repeated or omitted within the sequence. This work provides a foundation for future studies aimed at understanding the communicative significance of this call within these species, as well as for comparative work on the chick-a-dee call among all chickadee species.
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Of Mice, Birds, and Men: The Mouse Ultrasonic Song System and Vocal BehaviorArriaga, Gustavo January 2011 (has links)
<p>Mice produce many ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) in the 30 - 100 kHz range including pup isolation calls and adult male songs. These USVs are often used as behavioral readouts of internal states, to measure effects of social and pharmacological manipulations, and for behavioral phenotyping of mouse models for neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders; however, little is known about the biophysical and neurophysiological mechanisms of USV production in rodents. This lack of knowledge restricts the interpretation of data from vocalization-related experiments on mouse models of communication disorders and vocal medical conditions. Meanwhile, there has been increased interest in the social communication aspect of neural disorders such as autism, in addition to the common disorders involving motor control of the larynx: stroke, Parkinson's disease, laryngeal tremor, and spasmodic dysphonia. Therefore, it is timely and critical to begin assessing the neural substrate of vocal production in order to better understand the neuro-laryngeal deficits underlying communication problems.</p><p>Additionally, mouse models may generate new insight into the molecular basis of vocal learning. Traditionally, songbirds have been used as a model for speech learning in humans; however, the model is strongly limited by a lack of techniques for manipulating avian genetics. Accordingly, there has long been strong interest in finding a mammalian model for vocal learning studies. The characteristic features of accepted vocal learning species include programming of phonation by forebrain motor areas, a direct cortical projection to brainstem vocal motoneurons, and dependence on auditory feedback to develop and maintain vocalizations. Unfortunately, these features have not been observed in non-human primates or in birds that do not learn songs. Thus, in addition to elucidating vocal brain pathways it is also critical to determine the extent of any vocal learning capabilities present in the mouse USV system.</p><p>It is generally assumed that mice lack a forebrain system for vocal modification and that their USVs are innate; however, these basic assumptions have not been experimentally tested. I investigated the mouse song system to determine if male mouse song behavior and the supporting brain circuits resemble those of known vocal learning species. By visualizing activity-dependent immediate early gene expression as a marker of global activity patterns, I discovered that the song system includes motor cortex and striatal regions active during singing. Retrograde and anterograde tracing with pseudorabies virus and biodextran amines, respectively, revealed that the motor cortical region projects directly to the brainstem phonatory motor nucleus ambiguus. Chemical lesions in this region showed that it is not critical for producing innate templates of song syllables, but is required for producing more stereotyped acoustic features of syllables. To test for the basic components of adaptive learning I recorded the songs of mechanically and genetically deaf mice and found that male mice depend on auditory feedback to develop and maintain normal ultrasonic songs. Moreover, male mice that display natural strain specific song features may use auditory experience to copy the pitch of another strain when housed together and stimulated to compete sexually. I conclude that male mice have neuroanatomical and behavioral features thought to be unique to humans and song learning birds, suggesting that mice are capable of adaptive modification of the spectral features of their songs.</p> / Dissertation
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Vocal Communication within the Genus Chlorocebus: Insights into Mechanisms of Call Production and Call PerceptionPrice, Tabitha 04 September 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Collective responses to acoustic threat information in jackdawsWoods, Richard David January 2016 (has links)
Navigating the physical world may present only a small fraction of the challenges faced by social animals. Sociality brings with it numerous benefits, including access to important information that may have otherwise been harder to come by. However, almost every aspect of these apparent benefits may also entail additional cognitive challenges, including how to interpret signals from conspecifics, who to attend to, and how to incorporate knowledge about signallers when deciding how to respond. One approach to understanding the cognitive abilities associated with social function is to investigate social species that take part in potentially costly group behaviours, where individual decisions must be made in a social context. In this thesis I explore how jackdaws (Corvus monedula), a highly sociable corvid species, use acoustic information to coordinate collective anti-predator responses. In Chapter Two I showed using playback experiments that the magnitude of collective responses to anti-predator recruitment calls known as “scolding” calls depends on the identity of the caller, with larger responses to familiar colony members than unfamiliar individuals. In Chapter Three I then used habituation-dishabituation experiments to show that this vocal discrimination operates at the level of the individual, with jackdaws discriminating between the calls of different conspecifics, regardless of their level of familiarity. In Chapter Four, I examined whether aspects of call structure conveyed information about threat levels. Here, I found that high rates of scolding calls were associated with elevated threats, and playback experiments suggested that this information might result in larger group responses. The finding that jackdaws are capable of mediating their response to alarm calls based on the identity of the individual caller, and on structural variation in call production, raised the question of whether jackdaws employed similar forms discrimination between acoustic cues made by predators in their environment. I investigated this in Chapter Five, using playback experiments to show that jackdaws responded not only to the vocalisations of resident predators, but that this ability extended to novel predators, and that responsiveness was mediated by the phase of the breeding season in which predators were heard. Together, these findings provide insights in to how discrimination among acoustic cues can mediate group behaviour in species that respond collectively to threats.
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O efeito de novidade alimentar e comportamentos associados ao forrageio em um grupo semi livre de macacos-prego (Cebus libidinosus). / Novelty effect and foraging associated behaviou in semi-free ranging group of tufted becarded capuchin monkey (Cebus libidinosus).Cardoso, Raphael Moura 19 September 2008 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2008-09-19 / Pesquisas prévias indicam que os processos de facilitação social e intensificação do estímulo podem aumentar a aceitação de um item alimentar desconhecido dentro de grupos de macacos-prego. Os macacos-prego forrageiam em grupo e o sucesso individual é afetado pelo comportamento de outro membro do grupo. Ademais, os adultos de macacos-prego são socialmente tolerantes, principalmente em relação aos imaturos. Por exemplo, durante o processamento de frutos encapsulados os imaturos permanecem próximos ao indivíduo que processa o alimento, ou mesmo surrupiam pequenos pedaços de alimentos consumidos pelos companheiros. A tolerância, por sua vez, é considerada como um aspecto que favorece a troca de informações sociais em um grupo. Em Cebus nigritus, por exemplo, a emissão de assobios afeta o comportamento da audiência em relação à escolha de onde buscar alimento. Em contextos de exploração de uma fonte alimentar, o macaco-prego do cerrado (Cebus libidinosus) também emite assobios que, em geral, atraem outros indivíduos à fonte alimentar. No presente trabalho, realizamos experimentos envolvendo a apresentação, em uma estação alimentar (EA), de 20 itens alimentares conhecidos e 20 desconhecidos a um grupo semi-livre de Cebus libidinosus do Bosque Laranjeiras em Goiânia (16°43 S: 49°13 W). durante as sessões, registrávamos: o sexo e a faixa etária dos indivíduos em contato com a EA, a 05m e a 10 m da EA, em intervalos de 1 minuto; todas as ocorrências de interações que envolviam o interesse pelo alimento em posse de outro, e a identidade dos sujeitos envolvidos. Todas as sessões foram filmadas e gravadas digitalmente. Para cada indivíduo filmado na EA somamos o número de notas e sílabas de assobios foram contabilizadas a partir de sonogramas gerados pelo programa Avisoft LabPro 4.39. O tamanho e composição do grupo presente na área experimental foram similares entre as duas condições (alimento familiar e alimento novo), e indicou tolerância em relação à proximidade de imaturos. Os macacos mostraram-se sensíveis à novidade alimentar, emitindo mais comportamentos exploratórios e menos de familiaridade nesta condição. A probabilidade de ocorrência de interações do tipo Interesse pelo Alimento do Outro foi significativamente maior na condição onde o alimento apresentado era desconhecido ao grupo. A emissão de assobios foi maior na condição em que o alimento era familiar e apresentou uma correlação negativa com comportamentos de inspeção (uma medida indireta de novidade alimentar). Nossos resultados corroboram a ideia de que a tolerância e a troca de informações entre os indivíduos podem compensar os custos associados à competição durante o forrageio social, em particular no caso de informações sobre novos recursos. Sugerimos novas investigações sobre o papel das vocalizações associadas ao alimento no processo de aprendizagem de quais itens desconhecidos são seguros ou não.
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