Abstract

Social feedback plays an important role in human language development and in the vocal ontogeny of non-human animals. A special form of vocal feedback in humans, infant-directed speech – or motherese –facilitates language learning and is socially beneficial by increasing attention and arousal in the child. It is characterized by high pitch, expanded intonation contours and slower speech tempo. Furthermore, the vocal timbre (i.e. ’color’ of voice) of motherese differs from the timbre of adult-directed speech. In animals, pup-directed vocalizations are very common, especially in females. But so far there is hardly any research on whether there is a similar phenomenon as motherese in animal vocalizations. The greater sac-winged bat, Saccopteryx bilineata, is a vocal production learner with a large vocal repertoire that is acquired during ontogeny. We compared acoustic features between female pup-directed and adult-directed vocalizations and demonstrated that they differed in timbre and peak frequency. Furthermore, we described pup-directed vocalizations of adult males. During the ontogenetic period when pups’ isolation calls (used to solicit maternal care) are converging towards each other to form a group signature, adult males also produce isolation calls. Pups’ isolation calls are acoustically more similar to those of males from the same social group than to other males. In conclusion, our novel findings indicate that parent-offspring communication in bats is more complex and multifaceted than previously thought, with female pup-directed vocalizations reminiscent of human motherese and male pup-directed vocalizations that may facilitate the transmission of a vocal signature across generations.

Highlights

  • The social environment influences both speech acquisition in infants and vocal ontogeny in non-human animals

  • The overall classification success (25%) of the discriminant function analysis (DFA) was higher than expected by chance (7.7%), most MD sequences were not correctly classified to the respective female (N = 13 females; Supplementary Table S3)

  • The values for all six linearfrequency cepstral coefficients (LFCCs) increased from adult-directed to pup-directed vocalizations (Figure 2A)

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Summary

Introduction

The social environment influences both speech acquisition in infants and vocal ontogeny in non-human animals. Pup Directed Vocalizations in Bats (Beecher et al, 1985), and king penguins (Jouventin et al, 1999) The function of these vocalizations is to mediate social interactions between adults and young (parent-offspring reunions) and to influence the vocal ontogeny of offspring (Balcombe and McCracken, 1992; Charrier et al, 2001; Whitham et al, 2007; Takahashi et al, 2015). The use of infantdirected speech by which adults address the child is a wellknown phenomenon (Fernald and Kuhl, 1987; Kuhl et al, 1997) This infant-directed speech – or motherese – is characterized by unique universal prosodic features such as higher pitch, increased frequency range and slow tempo and is significantly different from adult-directed speech (Grieser and Kuhl, 1988; Broesch and Bryant, 2015). Differences in timbre between infant-directed and adult-directed vocalizations in non-human animals have never been addressed before

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