49 Citations
‘The bone is mine’: affective and referential aspects of dog growls
- 2010
Biology, Psychology
Humming in bears: a peculiar sustained mammalian vocalization
- 2010
Biology
This work clarified the presence of this vocalization in the species of the Ursidae as well as its structural characteristics and specific mode of sound production, and introduced the term humming for it.
Potential Sources of High Frequency and Biphonic Vocalization in the Dhole (Cuon alpinus)
- 2016
Biology
The results suggest that the high-frequency and biphonic calls in dog-like canids can be produced without specific anatomical adaptations of the sound-producing structures.
Acoustic parameters of dog barks carry emotional information for humans
- 2006
Biology, Psychology
A study of vocal nonlinearities in humpback whale songs: from production mechanisms to acoustic analysis
- 2016
Biology, Environmental Science
The results show that vocal nonlinearities may be a communication strategy that conveys information about the whale’s body size and physical fitness, and thus may be an important component of humpback whale songs.
Vocal changes in animals during disorders
- 2000
Computer Science
The harmonic-to-noise-ratio (HNR), an acoustic parameter not yet used in animal bioacoustics, was applied to dog barks to quantify dysphonia and certain aspects of the vocal fold and vocal tract anatomy were investigated in respect to their significance for laryngeal sound generation.
Genetic distance from wolves affects family dogs’ reactions towards howls
- 2023
Biology, Environmental Science
The results suggest that domestication impacts vocal behaviour significantly: disintegrating howling, a central, species-specific communication form of canids and gradually eradicating it from dogs’ repertoire.
Polyphony of domestic dog whines and vocal cues to body size
- 2021
Biology, Environmental Science
Potential production mechanisms and sound sources for each fundamental frequency are discussed; point to the acoustic similarity between high-frequency dog whines and rodent ultrasonic calls and hypothesize that ultra-high fundamental frequencies function to allow private, "tete-a-tete" communication between members of social groups.








