The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence

Humans exhibit what appears to be a unique vocal property: octave equivalence whereby adult male voices are, on average, an octave lower in pitch than those of adult females and children. The evolutionary significance of this seems largely to have escaped notice. While sexual selection might explain...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bannan, N, Bamford, JMS, Dunbar, RIM
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: University of Chicago Press 2024
_version_ 1811139682041331712
author Bannan, N
Bamford, JMS
Dunbar, RIM
author_facet Bannan, N
Bamford, JMS
Dunbar, RIM
author_sort Bannan, N
collection OXFORD
description Humans exhibit what appears to be a unique vocal property: octave equivalence whereby adult male voices are, on average, an octave lower in pitch than those of adult females and children. The evolutionary significance of this seems largely to have escaped notice. While sexual selection might explain why male voices are generally lower, it cannot explain why they should be so much lower than what would be expected for body size, nor why the average difference should be exactly one octave. Nor does a generalised dimorphism convey why precisely tuned octaves feature so commonly in human vocal interaction. The octave features strongly in the organisation of music. A consequence of this characteristic of human pitch perception and production is the capacity to share and respond to vocal pitches (and their instrumental equivalents) as if they are ‘the same’ irrespective of the difference in range, a phenomenon known as octave equivalence. We investigate the nature of octave equivalence from an adaptive perspective and propose a hypothesis for its evolution based on the importance of chorusing for social bonding and pitch-matching in inter-generational exchange.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:51:29Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:12819bce-6066-4ee0-841e-c6ac831afdac
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:09:58Z
publishDate 2024
publisher University of Chicago Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:12819bce-6066-4ee0-841e-c6ac831afdac2024-06-20T10:01:20ZThe evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalenceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:12819bce-6066-4ee0-841e-c6ac831afdacEnglishSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Chicago Press2024Bannan, NBamford, JMSDunbar, RIMHumans exhibit what appears to be a unique vocal property: octave equivalence whereby adult male voices are, on average, an octave lower in pitch than those of adult females and children. The evolutionary significance of this seems largely to have escaped notice. While sexual selection might explain why male voices are generally lower, it cannot explain why they should be so much lower than what would be expected for body size, nor why the average difference should be exactly one octave. Nor does a generalised dimorphism convey why precisely tuned octaves feature so commonly in human vocal interaction. The octave features strongly in the organisation of music. A consequence of this characteristic of human pitch perception and production is the capacity to share and respond to vocal pitches (and their instrumental equivalents) as if they are ‘the same’ irrespective of the difference in range, a phenomenon known as octave equivalence. We investigate the nature of octave equivalence from an adaptive perspective and propose a hypothesis for its evolution based on the importance of chorusing for social bonding and pitch-matching in inter-generational exchange.
spellingShingle Bannan, N
Bamford, JMS
Dunbar, RIM
The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence
title The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence
title_full The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence
title_fullStr The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence
title_short The evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice: the role of octave equivalence
title_sort evolution of gender dimorphism in the human voice the role of octave equivalence
work_keys_str_mv AT bannann theevolutionofgenderdimorphisminthehumanvoicetheroleofoctaveequivalence
AT bamfordjms theevolutionofgenderdimorphisminthehumanvoicetheroleofoctaveequivalence
AT dunbarrim theevolutionofgenderdimorphisminthehumanvoicetheroleofoctaveequivalence
AT bannann evolutionofgenderdimorphisminthehumanvoicetheroleofoctaveequivalence
AT bamfordjms evolutionofgenderdimorphisminthehumanvoicetheroleofoctaveequivalence
AT dunbarrim evolutionofgenderdimorphisminthehumanvoicetheroleofoctaveequivalence