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Main Authors: Hersh, Taylor A, Jadoul, Yannick, Gamba, Marco, Ravignani, Andrea, Favaro, Livio
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 2025
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40511771/
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author Hersh, Taylor A
Jadoul, Yannick
Gamba, Marco
Ravignani, Andrea
Favaro, Livio
author_facet Hersh, Taylor A
Jadoul, Yannick
Gamba, Marco
Ravignani, Andrea
Favaro, Livio
Hersh, Taylor A
Jadoul, Yannick
Gamba, Marco
Ravignani, Andrea
Favaro, Livio
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Accelerando and crescendo in African penguin ecstatic display songs. Hersh, Taylor A Jadoul, Yannick Gamba, Marco Ravignani, Andrea Favaro, Livio Many species produce rhythmic sound sequences. Some purportedly speed up their vocalizations throughout a display, reminiscent of-but not necessarily equivalent to-accelerando in human music. This phenomenon has been frequently reported but rarely quantified, which limits our ability to understand its mechanism, function, and evolution. Here, we use a suite of rhythm analyses to quantify temporal and acoustic features in the ecstatic display songs of male African penguins (Spheniscus demersus). We show that songs get faster (i.e., accelerando) and louder (i.e., crescendo) as they progress. The accelerando occurs because the intersyllable silences, not the syllables themselves, predictably shorten over time. This rhythmicity is maintained even when individuals take audible breaths. Individuals also show plasticity: when they start with a slow tempo, they speed up more strongly than when they start with a fast tempo. We hypothesize that this well-timed accelerando may stem from arousal-based mechanisms, biomechanical constraints, or more complex rhythmic control. Future work should test the mechanisms behind this intra-individual rhythmic variation since nonpasserine birds are thought to have limited vocal plasticity. By integrating a rich empirical dataset with cutting-edge rhythm analyses, we establish the necessary foundation to determine how such features evolved and their role(s) across communication systems.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40511771
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Accelerando and crescendo in African penguin ecstatic display songs.
Hersh, Taylor A
Jadoul, Yannick
Gamba, Marco
Ravignani, Andrea
Favaro, Livio
Accelerando and crescendo in African penguin ecstatic display songs. Hersh, Taylor A Jadoul, Yannick Gamba, Marco Ravignani, Andrea Favaro, Livio Many species produce rhythmic sound sequences. Some purportedly speed up their vocalizations throughout a display, reminiscent of-but not necessarily equivalent to-accelerando in human music. This phenomenon has been frequently reported but rarely quantified, which limits our ability to understand its mechanism, function, and evolution. Here, we use a suite of rhythm analyses to quantify temporal and acoustic features in the ecstatic display songs of male African penguins (Spheniscus demersus). We show that songs get faster (i.e., accelerando) and louder (i.e., crescendo) as they progress. The accelerando occurs because the intersyllable silences, not the syllables themselves, predictably shorten over time. This rhythmicity is maintained even when individuals take audible breaths. Individuals also show plasticity: when they start with a slow tempo, they speed up more strongly than when they start with a fast tempo. We hypothesize that this well-timed accelerando may stem from arousal-based mechanisms, biomechanical constraints, or more complex rhythmic control. Future work should test the mechanisms behind this intra-individual rhythmic variation since nonpasserine birds are thought to have limited vocal plasticity. By integrating a rich empirical dataset with cutting-edge rhythm analyses, we establish the necessary foundation to determine how such features evolved and their role(s) across communication systems.
title Accelerando and crescendo in African penguin ecstatic display songs.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40511771/