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FOR 499:  Acoustic Communication of Emotions in Nonhuman Mammals and Man: Production, Perception and Neuronal Processing

Subject Area Medicine
Term from 2003 to 2010
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 5470045
 
What are the biological roots of music and speech in man? This is a central but yet unanswered question in the evolutionary neurobiology of the acoustics of emotions. It is a fundamental trait of the communication system of all mammals to convey emotions. In the acoustic domain, emotions are transmitted by voice and music in man and by vocalisations in nonhuman mammals. To date, it is barely known to what extent humans and nonhuman mammals share mental capacities as well as coding and decoding strategies in acoustic communication and whether they are unique for all mammals, for primates or for man. In our research group zoologists, primatologists, psychologists, linguists, musicologists and physicians cooperate for the first time in a comparative approach to get insight into the acoustic communication of emotions on different levels of brain differentiation from mice to men. Music, speech and nonverbal communication of selected taxa are used as models to illuminate both shared and unique components in the acoustics, psychoacoustics and neurobiology of emotions.
DFG Programme Research Units
International Connection United Kingdom

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Spokesperson Professorin Dr. Elke Zimmermann (†)
 
 

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