ukwirednews
Headlines
Helium-huffing gibbons 'sing with soprano technique'
Published: 23rd Aug 2012 07:29:52
Researchers in Japan have discovered that lar gibbons use the same techniques as human soprano singers to make their melodic but piercing calls.
When the apes made calls while in an atmosphere rich in helium, the team analysed the calls' frequencies.
As the team report, the apes were able to control the natural frequencies of their "vocal tracts".
Such control, exemplified by sopranos, was thought to be unique to humans.
We share a great deal of the biological equipment of sound production with apes. That includes first of all the "source" - the vocal folds that humans and many animals share.
There is also the "vocal tract" - the oesophagus and trachea and the mouth, which are well known in humans to shape sung notes and subtle vowel sounds.
In humans the vocal tract acts as a filter on the sound from the source, and the "source-filter theory" held that the separate, fine control of the vocal tract to be the product of a long evolution in the development of the subtleties of speech.
Singing too has evolved, and soprano singers reach their piercing high notes by precisely controlling the shape of their vocal tract to match its natural, resonant frequency with multiples of the one being produced by their vocal folds.
Now Takeshi Nishimura of Kyoto University's Primate Research Institute and his colleagues have tested whether lar gibbons (also known as white-handed gibbons, Hylobates lar) have this same separate control - by using helium.
As anyone who has breathed helium knows, its presence raises the pitch of the voice. It increases the natural resonant frequency in the vocal tract because the speed of sound in helium is very different from that in air.
That shift allowed the team to record calls in helium and examine separately the sounds of gibbons' "pure-tone" vocalisations from the vocal folds as well as how they were modified in the vocal tract.
Detailed analyses of the frequencies produced showed that the gibbons modified their vocal tracts to match multiples of the vocal folds' frequencies - just like soprano singers.
Dr Nishimura told BBC News the findings were significant - not only that the "source-filter theory" was not the preserve of human physiology, but also that the gibbons had mastered techniques that in humans were only found in professional singers.
He explained that it upended a long history of research suggesting the control humans enjoy is the product of a long line of physiological and anatomical changes under the influence of evolution.
"The present study challenges that concept and throws new insight into the studies on biological foundations producing the diversifications in primate vocalisations, including human speech," he said.
"It is hoped that this study will encourage researchers in various research fields to conduct further investigations of primate vocalisations and that such empirical evidence will lead to a deeper understanding of the evolution of speech and language."
Harvard Citation
BBC News, 2012. Helium-huffing gibbons 'sing with soprano technique'. [Online] (Updated 23 Aug 2012)Available at: http://www.ukwirednews.com/news.php/1447753-Helium-huffing-gibbons-sing-with-soprano-technique [Accessed 20th May 2013]
More Headlines News
-
Police search Commons office of MP Nigel Evans
Police have searched the Commons office of MP Nigel Evans in relation to a "serious arrestable offence".... -
Cancer risk gene testing announced
A pioneering programme to test cancer patients for nearly 100 risk genes is to start in London and could represent the future of treatment i... -
Dale Cregan's 'bizarre' murder denials
Police killer Dale Cregan's denial of murdering two other people is "bizarre", a jury has heard.... -
Abu Qatada: Cleric refused bail
Radical cleric Abu Qatada has been refused bail by an immigration tribunal in his latest bid for freedom.... -
M23 rebels attack DR Congo army as UN force deploys
Heavy fighting has taken place between government and rebel forces in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. ... -
Brittany Ferries refuses to let pregnant woman board
A heavily pregnant British woman was left with an "extremely stressful" journey back to the UK after a ferry company refused to al... -
Actavis to buy Warner Chilcott for up to $8.5bn
US drugs maker Actavis, itself the subject of bid speculation, is to buy Dublin-based Warner Chilcott in a deal worth $8.5bn (£5.6bn) includ... -
Israel says 'no proof' its troops shot Mohammed al-Dura
An Israeli investigation has said a French news report in 2000 which blamed Israeli troops for shooting dead a Palestinian child was baseles... -
Russia Levada Centre pollsters targeted as 'foreign agents'
The head of Russia's only independent polling agency, Levada Centre, has said it could be forced to close after a warning from official... -
John O'Dowd makes changes to A-level exam re-sits
Education Minister John O'Dowd has announced some changes to A-levels in Northern Ireland, following a consultation. ...
Latest News
-
At 15:49:42 in England
Sex abuse priest Gordon Rideout jailed for 10 years
An Anglican priest who abused children in the 1960s and 70s has been jailed for 10 years.... -
At 15:46:46 in England
Police search Commons office of MP Nigel Evans
Police have searched the Commons office of MP Nigel Evans in relation to a "serious arrestable offence".... -
At 15:43:28 in Scotland
Injured capercaillie released back into wild in Ballater
A capercaillie has been released back into the wild after being found injured in Aberdeenshire.... -
At 15:42:41 in Scotland
Four held over '£46,000 of drugs' in Aberdeen
Four people have been charged after drugs with an estimated street value of more than £46,000 were seized in Aberdeen.... -
At 15:42:31 in England
Cancer risk gene testing announced
A pioneering programme to test cancer patients for nearly 100 risk genes is to start in London and could represent the future of treatment i... -
At 15:40:09 in England
Dale Cregan's 'bizarre' murder denials
Police killer Dale Cregan's denial of murdering two other people is "bizarre", a jury has heard.... -
At 15:36:50 in England
Benjamin Roach found guilty of baby daughter's manslaughter
A man has been found guilty of killing his four-week-old daughter by shaking her violently the first time he was alone with her.... -
At 15:36:00 in England
Glasgow-Liverpool multi-million pound drug gang jailed
Eight members of a Liverpool-based drugs gang have been jailed for supplying tens of millions of pounds worth of cocaine and heroin to Glasg... -
At 15:35:44 in England
Abu Qatada: Cleric refused bail
Radical cleric Abu Qatada has been refused bail by an immigration tribunal in his latest bid for freedom.... -
At 15:29:41 in World
Egypt sends extra troops to Sinai after abductions
Egypt has increased its security presence in the Sinai peninsula, four days after seven members of its forces were abducted there....
News In Other Categories
-
Ex-Wales rugby player Matthew J Watkins's cancer battle
Former Wales rugby international Matthew J Watkins has been diagnosed with a rare form of cancer in his pelvis.... -
Actavis to buy Warner Chilcott for up to $8.5bn
US drugs maker Actavis, itself the subject of bid speculation, is to buy Dublin-based Warner Chilcott in a deal worth $8.5bn (£5.6bn) includ... -
Justin Rowe book art opens British Academy Literature Week
Unwanted books consigned to the shelves of charity shops have been rescued by a Cambridge bookseller and turned into works of art for a lite... -
Police search Commons office of MP Nigel Evans
Police have searched the Commons office of MP Nigel Evans in relation to a "serious arrestable offence".... -
Bristol Academy extends reach overseas with first foreign students
With the doors to its brand new £1million training centre officially open, one of the UK's leading apprentice training providers, Bristol ba... -
Police search Commons office of MP Nigel Evans
Police have searched the Commons office of MP Nigel Evans in relation to a "serious arrestable offence"....



