Rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) hear rising frequency sounds as looming. |
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Authors: | Ghazanfar, Asif A. Maier, Joost X. |
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Abstract: | Rising sound intensity provides an important cue for the detection of looming objects. Studies with humans indirectly suggest that rising pitch can also signal a looming object. This link between rising intensity and rising frequency is puzzling because no physical rise in frequency occurs when a sound source approaches. Putative explanations include (a) the idea that the loudness of sound depends on its frequency, (b) the frequent co-occurrence of rising intensity with rising frequency in vocalizations generates an association between the 2 features, and (c) auditory neurons process amplitude- and frequency-modulated sounds similarly. If these hypotheses are valid, then rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta)—which share some homologies in the vocal production apparatus and auditory system—should also associate rising frequency with rising intensity, and thus should perceive rising frequency as a looming sound source. A head-turning assay and a preferential-looking paradigm revealed that monkeys show an attentional bias toward rising versus falling frequency sounds and link the former to visual looming signals. This suggests that monkeys hear a rising frequency sound as a looming sound source even though, in the real world, no such link exists. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | multisensory time-to-collision audiovisual looming time-to-arrival doppler effect high-rising frequency sounds monkeys |
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