This chapter explores the use of timbre in scientific studies of animal vocalizations in the decades around the end of the twentieth century. In the first case, I examine the efforts of naturalists and ornithologists to represent timbre in their notation of bird song in the field. The second case study discusses current work in cognitive science to better understand the origins of human language and music through the study of songbirds. I argue that by assuming—implicitly, then explicitly—timbral perception in non-human species, the naturalists and scientists in both episodes are attempting to make timbre natural. These efforts to naturalize and universalize the perceptual importance of timbre as biologically meaningful says more about our ...
Music takes on a variety of forms in different cultures, but several cross-cultural regularities exi...
Songbirds spend much of their time learning, producing, and listening to complex vocal sequences we ...
SummaryRhythmic entrainment, long believed an exclusive prerogative of humans, has now been demonstr...
Language is a uniquely human trait. All animals have ways to communicate, but these systems do not...
Recognizing other individuals by sound is a primary function of many vertebrate communication system...
Recent findings indicate that European starlings perceive overall spectral shape and use this, rathe...
Background in zoömusicology. The discipline of zoömusicology is a pioneering enterprise that require...
Scientific observation and representation tend to be seen as exclusively visual affairs. But scienti...
Scientific observation and representation tend to be seen as exclusively visual affairs. But scienti...
Research into speech perception by nonhuman animals can be crucially informative in assessing whethe...
In this article I investigate how and why birdsong is regularly excluded from definitions of music. ...
The study of acoustic communication between animals forms an important theme in research into behavi...
dissertationUnderstanding how reproductive barriers between species arise and are maintained is para...
What messages are coded through the nonhuman voice? How do animals witness, record, and replay the s...
Studies of the biology of music (as of language) are highly interdisciplinary and demand the integra...
Music takes on a variety of forms in different cultures, but several cross-cultural regularities exi...
Songbirds spend much of their time learning, producing, and listening to complex vocal sequences we ...
SummaryRhythmic entrainment, long believed an exclusive prerogative of humans, has now been demonstr...
Language is a uniquely human trait. All animals have ways to communicate, but these systems do not...
Recognizing other individuals by sound is a primary function of many vertebrate communication system...
Recent findings indicate that European starlings perceive overall spectral shape and use this, rathe...
Background in zoömusicology. The discipline of zoömusicology is a pioneering enterprise that require...
Scientific observation and representation tend to be seen as exclusively visual affairs. But scienti...
Scientific observation and representation tend to be seen as exclusively visual affairs. But scienti...
Research into speech perception by nonhuman animals can be crucially informative in assessing whethe...
In this article I investigate how and why birdsong is regularly excluded from definitions of music. ...
The study of acoustic communication between animals forms an important theme in research into behavi...
dissertationUnderstanding how reproductive barriers between species arise and are maintained is para...
What messages are coded through the nonhuman voice? How do animals witness, record, and replay the s...
Studies of the biology of music (as of language) are highly interdisciplinary and demand the integra...
Music takes on a variety of forms in different cultures, but several cross-cultural regularities exi...
Songbirds spend much of their time learning, producing, and listening to complex vocal sequences we ...
SummaryRhythmic entrainment, long believed an exclusive prerogative of humans, has now been demonstr...