ラテンアメリカの猿がアルプスのヨーデル歌手を凌駕:音響生物学的研究(The monkeys that surpass the Alps’ yodelers)

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2025-04-23 スウェーデン王立工科大学(KTH)

KTH王立工科大学の音声音響学教授ステン・テルンストローム氏らの国際研究チームは、ラテンアメリカの熱帯雨林に生息するサルが、アルプスのヨーデル歌手を凌駕する高度な発声能力を持つことを明らかにしました。これらのサルは、声帯の上部にある極薄の「声帯膜」を利用し、音の高さや速度を増幅しています。この構造は人間には存在せず、サルの発声範囲は人間の約5倍に達します。研究は、CT解析やボリビアの野生動物保護区での音声収録を通じて行われ、サルの発声が社会的コミュニケーションに重要な役割を果たしていることが示されました。

<関連情報>

「サルのヨーデル」-新世界サルの発声における周波数ジャンプはヒトの声域遷移を大きく上回る ‘Monkey yodels’—frequency jumps in New World monkey vocalizations greatly surpass human vocal register transitions

Christian T. Herbst,Isao T. Tokuda,Takeshi Nishimura,Sten Ternström,Vicky Ossio,Marcelo Levy,W. Tecumseh FitchandJacob C. Dunn
Philosophical Transactions of The Royal Society B  Published:03 April 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2024.0005

ラテンアメリカの猿がアルプスのヨーデル歌手を凌駕:音響生物学的研究(The monkeys that surpass the Alps’ yodelers)

Abstract

We investigated the causal basis of abrupt frequency jumps in a unique database of New World monkey vocalizations. We used a combination of acoustic and electroglottographic recordings in vivo, excised larynx investigations of vocal fold dynamics, and computational modelling. We particularly attended to the contribution of the vocal membranes: thin upward extensions of the vocal folds found in most primates but absent in humans. In three of the six investigated species, we observed two distinct modes of vocal fold vibration. The first, involving vocal fold vibration alone, produced low-frequency oscillations, and is analogous to that underlying human phonation. The second, incorporating the vocal membranes, resulted in much higher-frequency oscillation. Abrupt fundamental frequency shifts were observed in all three datasets. While these data are reminiscent of the rapid transitions in frequency observed in certain human singing styles (e.g. yodelling), the frequency jumps are considerably larger in the nonhuman primates studied. Our data suggest that peripheral modifications of vocal anatomy provide an important source of variability and complexity in the vocal repertoires of nonhuman primates. We further propose that the call repertoire is crucially related to a species’ ability to vocalize with different laryngeal mechanisms, analogous to human vocal registers.

This article is part of the theme issue ‘Nonlinear phenomena in vertebrate vocalizations: mechanisms and communicative functions’.

生物工学一般
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