Abstract

The effects of bilateral destruction of the cortical face area, anterior and posterior supplementary motor area and anterior cingular cortex on spontaneous vocalization were studied in 16 squirrel monkeys ( Saimiri sciureus). Each type of lesion was made in two groups of two animals each. Both animals of a group received the same type of lesion at the same day. Each group was recorded for 10 sessions of one hour before operation and 10 sessions after operation. Pre- and post-operative vocalizations were compared in respect to total number and acoustic structure. It was found that none of the lesions affected acoustic structure as judged by a sonagraphic analysis. However, lesions in the anterior supplementary motor area (at the level of the callosal genu) reduced the total vocalization number significantly. This decrease was essentially due to a drastic reduction of the so-called isolation peep, a long-distance contact call. The results suggest: (i) that the cortical face area is only involved in the control of learnt vocal utterances (such as human speech and song) but not in the production of genetically preprogrammed utterances (such as monkey calls and human pain groans); (ii) that the anterior cingulate cortex is necessary for the volitional initiation of vocalization but not for the initiation of calls in an emotional situation; (iii) that the posterior supplementary motor area does not play any role in vocal behaviour of monkeys; and (iv) that the anterior supplementary motor area is involved in the production of vocalizations which are not triggered directly by external events.

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