The Evolution of Emotional Communication
From Sounds in Nonhuman Mammals to Speech and Music in Man
Herausgeber: Altenmuller, Eckart; Zimmermann, Elke; Schmidt, Sabine
The Evolution of Emotional Communication
From Sounds in Nonhuman Mammals to Speech and Music in Man
Herausgeber: Altenmuller, Eckart; Zimmermann, Elke; Schmidt, Sabine
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Why do we think that we can understand animal voices - such as the barking of a pet dog, the meows of the family cat? Why do we think of deep voices as dominant and high voices as submissive.This groundbreaking book presents a thorough exploration into how acoustically conveyed emotions are generated and processed in both animals and humans.
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Why do we think that we can understand animal voices - such as the barking of a pet dog, the meows of the family cat? Why do we think of deep voices as dominant and high voices as submissive.This groundbreaking book presents a thorough exploration into how acoustically conveyed emotions are generated and processed in both animals and humans.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 175mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 816g
- ISBN-13: 9780199583560
- ISBN-10: 0199583560
- Artikelnr.: 36596678
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. März 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 175mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 816g
- ISBN-13: 9780199583560
- ISBN-10: 0199583560
- Artikelnr.: 36596678
Prof. Dr. med. Eckart Altenmüller (b. 1955) holds a Masters degree in classical flute, and is a Medical Doctor. After clinical training as a neurologist and habilitation, he became in 1994 chairman and director of the Institute of Music Physiology and Musicians' Medicine at the University of Music, Drama, and Media in Hannover. He continues research into the neurobiology of emotions and into movement disorders in musicians as well as motor, auditory and sensory learning. Since 2005 he is President of the German Society of Music Physiology and Musicians' Medicine and Member of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences. Privatdozent Dr. rer nat. Sabine Schmidt is an experimental behavioural and sensory biologist and Head of the Sensory Biology group of the Institute of Zoology at the University of Veterinary Medicine and the Centre for Systems Neuroscience in Hannover, Germany. Her main research interests cover behavioural ecology and psychoacoustics, with special emphasis on echolocation and acoustic communication in bats. Prof. Dr. rer nat. Elke Zimmermann is an experimental behavioural and evolutionary biologist and Director of the Institute of Zoology and Professor at the University of Veterinary Medicine and the Center for Systems Neuroscience in Hannover, Germany. Her main research interests cover patterns, processes and mechanisms of primate adaptation, speciation and evolution, with special emphasis to the evolution of communication and cognition. She is spokesperson of the DFG-funded interdisciplinary Research Unit Acoustic communication of emotions in humans and nonhuman mammals.
* Part A: Introductory Section
* 1: M. Mortillaru, M. Mehu and K.R. Scherer: The evolutionary origin
of multimodal synchronisation and emotional expression
* 2: W.T. Fitch and K. Zuberbühler: Primate precursors to human
language: Beyond discontinuity
* 3: J.P. Rauschecker: Brain networks for the encoding of emotions in
communication sounds of human and nonhuman primates
* Part B: Different mammalian taxa
* 4: G. Ehret: Sound communication in house mice: Emotions in their
voices and ears?
* 5: S. Brudzynks: Vocalizations as indicators of emotional states in
rats and cats
* 6: S. Schmidt: Beyond echolocation: Emotional acoustic communication
in bats
* 7: J. Soltis: Emotional communication in African Elephants
* 8: E. Zimmermann, L. Leliveld, and S. Schehka: Toward the
evolutionary roots of affective prosody in human acoustic
communication: A comparative approach to mammalian voices
* 9: C.T. Snowdon and D. Teie: Emotional communication in monkeys:
Music to their ears?
* Part C: Non-speech Human vocalizations
* 10: P. Zeskind: Infant crying and the synchrony of arousal
* 11: M. J. Owren, M. Philipp, E. Vanman, N. Trivedi, A. Schulman, and
J.A. Bachorowski: Understanding spontaneous human laughter: The role
of voicing in inducing positive emotion
* 12: D. Szameitat, D. Wildgruber, and K. Alter: Vocal expression of
emotions in laughter
* Part D: Human Prosody
* 13: D. Grandjean and S. Frühholz: An integrative model of brain
processes for the decoding of emotional prosody
* 14: S.A. Kotz, A.S. Hasting, and S. Paulmann: On the orbito-striatal
interface in (acoustic) emotional processing
* 15: C. Schroeder and R. Dengler: The role of dopamine in perception
and expression of emotional communication in Parkinson's disease
* 16: P.N. Juslin: Vocal affect expression: Problems and promises
* Part E: Music
* 17: I. Peretz, W. Aube, and J. Armony: Towards a neurobiology of
musical emotions
* 18: T. Fritz and S. Koelsch: Acoustically mediated emotional
contagion as an across-species homology underlying music processing
* 19: E. Altenmüller R. Kopiez, and O. Grewe: A contribution to the
evolutionary basis of music: Lessons from the chill-response
* Part F: Summary: Where to go?
* 20: 1. E. Altenmüller, S. Schmidt, and E. Zimmermann: A cross-taxa
concept of emotion in acoustic communication: An ethological
perspective
* 1: M. Mortillaru, M. Mehu and K.R. Scherer: The evolutionary origin
of multimodal synchronisation and emotional expression
* 2: W.T. Fitch and K. Zuberbühler: Primate precursors to human
language: Beyond discontinuity
* 3: J.P. Rauschecker: Brain networks for the encoding of emotions in
communication sounds of human and nonhuman primates
* Part B: Different mammalian taxa
* 4: G. Ehret: Sound communication in house mice: Emotions in their
voices and ears?
* 5: S. Brudzynks: Vocalizations as indicators of emotional states in
rats and cats
* 6: S. Schmidt: Beyond echolocation: Emotional acoustic communication
in bats
* 7: J. Soltis: Emotional communication in African Elephants
* 8: E. Zimmermann, L. Leliveld, and S. Schehka: Toward the
evolutionary roots of affective prosody in human acoustic
communication: A comparative approach to mammalian voices
* 9: C.T. Snowdon and D. Teie: Emotional communication in monkeys:
Music to their ears?
* Part C: Non-speech Human vocalizations
* 10: P. Zeskind: Infant crying and the synchrony of arousal
* 11: M. J. Owren, M. Philipp, E. Vanman, N. Trivedi, A. Schulman, and
J.A. Bachorowski: Understanding spontaneous human laughter: The role
of voicing in inducing positive emotion
* 12: D. Szameitat, D. Wildgruber, and K. Alter: Vocal expression of
emotions in laughter
* Part D: Human Prosody
* 13: D. Grandjean and S. Frühholz: An integrative model of brain
processes for the decoding of emotional prosody
* 14: S.A. Kotz, A.S. Hasting, and S. Paulmann: On the orbito-striatal
interface in (acoustic) emotional processing
* 15: C. Schroeder and R. Dengler: The role of dopamine in perception
and expression of emotional communication in Parkinson's disease
* 16: P.N. Juslin: Vocal affect expression: Problems and promises
* Part E: Music
* 17: I. Peretz, W. Aube, and J. Armony: Towards a neurobiology of
musical emotions
* 18: T. Fritz and S. Koelsch: Acoustically mediated emotional
contagion as an across-species homology underlying music processing
* 19: E. Altenmüller R. Kopiez, and O. Grewe: A contribution to the
evolutionary basis of music: Lessons from the chill-response
* Part F: Summary: Where to go?
* 20: 1. E. Altenmüller, S. Schmidt, and E. Zimmermann: A cross-taxa
concept of emotion in acoustic communication: An ethological
perspective
* Part A: Introductory Section
* 1: M. Mortillaru, M. Mehu and K.R. Scherer: The evolutionary origin
of multimodal synchronisation and emotional expression
* 2: W.T. Fitch and K. Zuberbühler: Primate precursors to human
language: Beyond discontinuity
* 3: J.P. Rauschecker: Brain networks for the encoding of emotions in
communication sounds of human and nonhuman primates
* Part B: Different mammalian taxa
* 4: G. Ehret: Sound communication in house mice: Emotions in their
voices and ears?
* 5: S. Brudzynks: Vocalizations as indicators of emotional states in
rats and cats
* 6: S. Schmidt: Beyond echolocation: Emotional acoustic communication
in bats
* 7: J. Soltis: Emotional communication in African Elephants
* 8: E. Zimmermann, L. Leliveld, and S. Schehka: Toward the
evolutionary roots of affective prosody in human acoustic
communication: A comparative approach to mammalian voices
* 9: C.T. Snowdon and D. Teie: Emotional communication in monkeys:
Music to their ears?
* Part C: Non-speech Human vocalizations
* 10: P. Zeskind: Infant crying and the synchrony of arousal
* 11: M. J. Owren, M. Philipp, E. Vanman, N. Trivedi, A. Schulman, and
J.A. Bachorowski: Understanding spontaneous human laughter: The role
of voicing in inducing positive emotion
* 12: D. Szameitat, D. Wildgruber, and K. Alter: Vocal expression of
emotions in laughter
* Part D: Human Prosody
* 13: D. Grandjean and S. Frühholz: An integrative model of brain
processes for the decoding of emotional prosody
* 14: S.A. Kotz, A.S. Hasting, and S. Paulmann: On the orbito-striatal
interface in (acoustic) emotional processing
* 15: C. Schroeder and R. Dengler: The role of dopamine in perception
and expression of emotional communication in Parkinson's disease
* 16: P.N. Juslin: Vocal affect expression: Problems and promises
* Part E: Music
* 17: I. Peretz, W. Aube, and J. Armony: Towards a neurobiology of
musical emotions
* 18: T. Fritz and S. Koelsch: Acoustically mediated emotional
contagion as an across-species homology underlying music processing
* 19: E. Altenmüller R. Kopiez, and O. Grewe: A contribution to the
evolutionary basis of music: Lessons from the chill-response
* Part F: Summary: Where to go?
* 20: 1. E. Altenmüller, S. Schmidt, and E. Zimmermann: A cross-taxa
concept of emotion in acoustic communication: An ethological
perspective
* 1: M. Mortillaru, M. Mehu and K.R. Scherer: The evolutionary origin
of multimodal synchronisation and emotional expression
* 2: W.T. Fitch and K. Zuberbühler: Primate precursors to human
language: Beyond discontinuity
* 3: J.P. Rauschecker: Brain networks for the encoding of emotions in
communication sounds of human and nonhuman primates
* Part B: Different mammalian taxa
* 4: G. Ehret: Sound communication in house mice: Emotions in their
voices and ears?
* 5: S. Brudzynks: Vocalizations as indicators of emotional states in
rats and cats
* 6: S. Schmidt: Beyond echolocation: Emotional acoustic communication
in bats
* 7: J. Soltis: Emotional communication in African Elephants
* 8: E. Zimmermann, L. Leliveld, and S. Schehka: Toward the
evolutionary roots of affective prosody in human acoustic
communication: A comparative approach to mammalian voices
* 9: C.T. Snowdon and D. Teie: Emotional communication in monkeys:
Music to their ears?
* Part C: Non-speech Human vocalizations
* 10: P. Zeskind: Infant crying and the synchrony of arousal
* 11: M. J. Owren, M. Philipp, E. Vanman, N. Trivedi, A. Schulman, and
J.A. Bachorowski: Understanding spontaneous human laughter: The role
of voicing in inducing positive emotion
* 12: D. Szameitat, D. Wildgruber, and K. Alter: Vocal expression of
emotions in laughter
* Part D: Human Prosody
* 13: D. Grandjean and S. Frühholz: An integrative model of brain
processes for the decoding of emotional prosody
* 14: S.A. Kotz, A.S. Hasting, and S. Paulmann: On the orbito-striatal
interface in (acoustic) emotional processing
* 15: C. Schroeder and R. Dengler: The role of dopamine in perception
and expression of emotional communication in Parkinson's disease
* 16: P.N. Juslin: Vocal affect expression: Problems and promises
* Part E: Music
* 17: I. Peretz, W. Aube, and J. Armony: Towards a neurobiology of
musical emotions
* 18: T. Fritz and S. Koelsch: Acoustically mediated emotional
contagion as an across-species homology underlying music processing
* 19: E. Altenmüller R. Kopiez, and O. Grewe: A contribution to the
evolutionary basis of music: Lessons from the chill-response
* Part F: Summary: Where to go?
* 20: 1. E. Altenmüller, S. Schmidt, and E. Zimmermann: A cross-taxa
concept of emotion in acoustic communication: An ethological
perspective