2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10764-008-9263-8
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Vocal Repertoire of Cebus capucinus: Acoustic Structure, Context, and Usage

Abstract: Researchers studying nonhuman primate vocal repertoires suggest that convergent environmental, social, and motivational factors account for intra-and interspecific vocal variation. We provide a detailed overview of the vocal repertoire of white-faced capuchins, including acoustic analyses and contextual information of vocal production and vocal usage by different age-sex classes in social interactions. The repertoire is a mixture of graded and discrete vocalizations. In addition, there is general support for s… Show more

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Cited by 119 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…Frequency-time spectra were analyzed with LMA 9.2, a custom software tool to extract different sets of variables from acoustic signals (Schrader and Hammerschmidt 1997). I focused on acoustic variables that characterize the general call structure and are comparable with acoustic variables that were measured in other studies characterizing the structure of mammalian vocalizations (Manser et al 2001;Fichtel and Hammerschmidt 2002;Fichtel et al 2005;Gros-Louis et al 2008). Also, I briefly describe the acoustic variables that were used for the analysis (Fig.…”
Section: Study Sites and Acoustic Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Frequency-time spectra were analyzed with LMA 9.2, a custom software tool to extract different sets of variables from acoustic signals (Schrader and Hammerschmidt 1997). I focused on acoustic variables that characterize the general call structure and are comparable with acoustic variables that were measured in other studies characterizing the structure of mammalian vocalizations (Manser et al 2001;Fichtel and Hammerschmidt 2002;Fichtel et al 2005;Gros-Louis et al 2008). Also, I briefly describe the acoustic variables that were used for the analysis (Fig.…”
Section: Study Sites and Acoustic Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two of us (A. González and L. Tórrez ) were taking behavioral observations when we heard capuchin alarm vocalizations for a terrestrial predator (Gros-Louis et al 2008) and saw the alpha male and an adult female moving rapidly in the direction of the call. They joined other members of their group including the two other large adult males and at least three subadult males, and directed physical threats, including shaking and breaking and throwing branches, as well as facial and vocal threats, at a dense liana tangle.…”
Section: Jaguar Predation Of a Mobbing Capuchinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vocalizations were recorded using a Marantz PMD-660 portable recorder (Marantz America, Inc., Mahwah, NJ) and a Sennheiser ME66 shotgun microphone (Sennheiser Electronic Corp., Old Lyme, CT). The auditory stimuli were meant to simulate the presence of another group and consisted of 1 min of groupfeeding noises, including food-associated calls [''huh'' vocalizations;Gros-Louis et al, 2008;Oppenheimer, 1973], and the sounds of falling fruits and moving monkeys, punctuated halfway through by screams associated with a within-group fight. All stimuli were made using Raven Lite 1.0 [Charif et al, 2006] and were broadcast from an iPod (Apple Inc., Cupertino, CA) using a MiniVox Lite speaker (Anchor Audio, Inc., Torrence, CA).…”
Section: Playback Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%