Human speech universally exhibits a 3- to 8-Hz rhythm, corresponding to the rate of syllable production, which is reflected in both the sound envelope and the visual mouth movements. Artificial perturbation of the speech rhythm outside the natural range reduces speech intelligibility, demonstrating a perceptual tuning to this frequency band. One theory posits that the mouth movements at the core of this speech rhythm evolved through modification of ancestral primate facial expressions. Recent evidence shows that one such communicative gesture in macaque monkeys, lip-smacking, has motor parallels with speech in its rhythmicity, its developmental trajectory, and the coordination of vocal tract structures. Whether monkeys also exhibit a percep...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Primates, including humans, communicate using facial expressions, vocalizations and often a combinat...
Human speech universally exhibits a 3- to 8-Hz rhythm, corresponding to the rate of syllable product...
In primates, different vocalizations are produced, at least in part, by making different facial exp...
SummaryA key feature of speech is its stereotypical 5 Hz rhythm [1, 2]. One theory posits that this ...
Across all languages studied to date, audiovisual speech exhibits a consistent rhythmic structure. T...
Speech is a human hallmark, but its evolutionary origins continue to defy scientific explanation. Re...
The evolutionary origins of speech remain obscure. Recently, it was proposed that speech derived fro...
The evolutionary origins of speech remain obscure. Recently, it was proposed that speech derived fro...
<div><p>The evolutionary origins of speech remain obscure. Recently, it was proposed that speech der...
The integration of the visual and auditory modalities during human speech perception is the default ...
Speech production involves the movement of the mouth and other regions of the face resulting in visu...
SummaryRecently, we have seen a surge of interest in identifying possible evolutionary links between...
Salient sounds such as those created by drumming can serve as means of nonvocal acoustic communicati...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Primates, including humans, communicate using facial expressions, vocalizations and often a combinat...
Human speech universally exhibits a 3- to 8-Hz rhythm, corresponding to the rate of syllable product...
In primates, different vocalizations are produced, at least in part, by making different facial exp...
SummaryA key feature of speech is its stereotypical 5 Hz rhythm [1, 2]. One theory posits that this ...
Across all languages studied to date, audiovisual speech exhibits a consistent rhythmic structure. T...
Speech is a human hallmark, but its evolutionary origins continue to defy scientific explanation. Re...
The evolutionary origins of speech remain obscure. Recently, it was proposed that speech derived fro...
The evolutionary origins of speech remain obscure. Recently, it was proposed that speech derived fro...
<div><p>The evolutionary origins of speech remain obscure. Recently, it was proposed that speech der...
The integration of the visual and auditory modalities during human speech perception is the default ...
Speech production involves the movement of the mouth and other regions of the face resulting in visu...
SummaryRecently, we have seen a surge of interest in identifying possible evolutionary links between...
Salient sounds such as those created by drumming can serve as means of nonvocal acoustic communicati...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Voluntary control of vocal production is an essential component of the language faculty, which is th...
Primates, including humans, communicate using facial expressions, vocalizations and often a combinat...