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Handbook of Mammalian Vocalization
An Integrative Neuroscience Approach

Understanding vocalization and its neural control is an important part of our quest to investigate the origin and neural control of vocal communication, including language in humans. This comprehensive handbook is the first thorough reference of the field from the neural control of the larynx, the perception of vocal signals to the effect of vocal communication on the behavior

Stefan M Brudzynski (Edited by)

9780123745934, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 8 December 2009

546 pages
27.6 x 21.5 x 3.2 cm, 1.75 kg

Handbook of Mammalian Vocalization is designed as a broad and comprehensive, but well-balanced book, written from the neuroscience point of view in the broad sense of this term. This well-illustrated Handbook pays particular attention to systematically organized details but also to the explanatory style of the text and internal cohesiveness of the content, so the successive chapters gradually develop a consistent story without losing the inherent complexity. Studies from many species are included, however rodents dominate, as most of the brain investigations were done on these species.

The leading idea of the Handbook is that vocalizations evolved as highly adaptive specific signals, which are selectively picked up by the brain. The brain serves as a receptor and behavioural amplifier. Brain systems will be described, which allow vocal signals rapidly changing the entire state of the organism and trigger vital biological responses, usually also with accompanying emission of vocalizations. Integrative brain functions leading to vocal outcome will be described, along with the vocalization generators and motor output to larynx and other supportive motor subsystems. The last sections of the Handbook explains bioacoustic structure of vocalizations, present understanding of information coding, and origins of the complex semiotic/ semantic content of vocalizations in social mammals.

The Handbook is a major source of information for professionals from many fields, with a neuroscience approach as a common denominator. The handbook provides consistent and unified understanding of all major aspects of vocalization in a monographic manner, and at the same time, gives an encyclopaedic overview of major topics associated with vocalization from molecular/ cellular level to behavior and cognitive processing. It is written in a strictly scientific way but clear enough to serve not only for specialized researchers in different fields of neuroscience but also for academic teachers of neuroscience, including behavioural neuroscience, affective neuroscience, clinical neuroscience, neuroethology, biopsychology, neurolingusitics, speech pathology, and other related fields, and also for research fellows, graduate and other advanced students, who widely need such a source publication.

Section 1. Introduction

Section 2. Evolution of the vocal system and vocalization

Section 3. Diversity of vocalizations

Section 4. Vocal signals as specific stimuli: selective perception of vocalization

Section 5. Brain as an amplifier of vocal signals: effects of vocalization on the organism’s state and behavior

Section 6. Limbic generation of vocalization: Vocalization as an index of behavioural state

Section 7. Hypothalamic/limbic integrative function for vocal/behavioural outcome

Section 8. Midbrain and central pattern generators for vocalization

Section 9. Integrative motor functions of the ambiguous, retroambiguus, and parabrachial nuclei

Section 10. Sound production by larynx

Section 11. Semiotic codes in vocalization: communication systems in animals

Subject Areas: Animal behaviour [PSVP], Neurosciences [PSAN], Neurology & clinical neurophysiology [MJN], Physiology [MFG], Physiological & neuro-psychology, biopsychology [JMM]

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