At least one non-human primate species—the marmoset monkey—exhibits developmental processes similar to human vocal development. These processes include babbling-like early vocal output and a role for social feedback in changing this output into mature-sounding vocalizations. Such parallel behaviors provide a window through which we can begin to understand the physiological mechanisms for how early vocalizations are produced and shaped by social feedback. The latest work shows that the acoustic structure of babbling in infant monkeys is driven by oscillations of the autonomic nervous system. It is hypothesized that this autonomic nervous system rhythm is perturbed through vocal interactions between infants and parents. These interactions gra...
Vocal development is usually studied from the perspective of neuroscience. In this issue, Zhang and ...
An increasingly popular animal model for studying the neural basis of social behavior, cognition, an...
The evolution of vocal communication in humans required the emergence of not only voluntary control ...
In adult animals, movement and vocalizations are coordinated, sometimes facilitating, and at other t...
Across vertebrates, progressive changes in vocal behavior during postnatal development are typically...
A new study shows that vocal sequences produced by newborn marmoset monkeys are driven by slow fluct...
The vocal behavior of infants changes dramatically during early life. Whether or not such a change r...
As a prerequisite for human speech vocal communication has been intensively investigated in various ...
The evolution of the autonomic nervous system provides an organizing principle to interpret the adap...
<div><p>The vocal behavior of infants changes dramatically during early life. Whether or not such a ...
Evolution and development are typically characterized as the outcomes of gradual changes, but someti...
Evolution and development are typically characterized as the outcomes of gradual changes, but someti...
Vocal development is usually studied from the perspective of neuroscience. In this issue, Zhang and ...
For over half a century now, primate vocalizations have been thought to undergo little or no experie...
Across all languages studied to date, audiovisual speech exhibits a consistent rhythmic structure. T...
Vocal development is usually studied from the perspective of neuroscience. In this issue, Zhang and ...
An increasingly popular animal model for studying the neural basis of social behavior, cognition, an...
The evolution of vocal communication in humans required the emergence of not only voluntary control ...
In adult animals, movement and vocalizations are coordinated, sometimes facilitating, and at other t...
Across vertebrates, progressive changes in vocal behavior during postnatal development are typically...
A new study shows that vocal sequences produced by newborn marmoset monkeys are driven by slow fluct...
The vocal behavior of infants changes dramatically during early life. Whether or not such a change r...
As a prerequisite for human speech vocal communication has been intensively investigated in various ...
The evolution of the autonomic nervous system provides an organizing principle to interpret the adap...
<div><p>The vocal behavior of infants changes dramatically during early life. Whether or not such a ...
Evolution and development are typically characterized as the outcomes of gradual changes, but someti...
Evolution and development are typically characterized as the outcomes of gradual changes, but someti...
Vocal development is usually studied from the perspective of neuroscience. In this issue, Zhang and ...
For over half a century now, primate vocalizations have been thought to undergo little or no experie...
Across all languages studied to date, audiovisual speech exhibits a consistent rhythmic structure. T...
Vocal development is usually studied from the perspective of neuroscience. In this issue, Zhang and ...
An increasingly popular animal model for studying the neural basis of social behavior, cognition, an...
The evolution of vocal communication in humans required the emergence of not only voluntary control ...