Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT:
SUBMITTER: Schopf C
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4991872 | biostudies-literature | 2016
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Schopf Christian C Schmidt Sabine S Zimmermann Elke E
PeerJ 20160816
When exposed to enhanced background noise, humans avoid signal masking by increasing the amplitude of the voice, a phenomenon termed the Lombard effect. This auditory feedback-mediated voice control has also been found in monkeys, bats, cetaceans, fish and some frogs and birds. We studied the Lombard effect for the first time in a phylogenetically basal primate, the grey mouse lemur, Microcebus murinus. When background noise was increased, mouse lemurs were able to raise the amplitude of the voi ...[more]