Humans mirror animal preferences in mating calls, study finds.

TL;DR Summary
A global experiment analyzed 110 sound pairs from 16 species (birds, frogs, insects, mammals) and found that about 4,000 human listeners tended to prefer the same calls animals use to attract mates. The stronger the animal preference, the more likely humans agreed, and participants were faster to pick the preferred sounds, suggesting shared neural processing in sound perception. The researchers note many questions remain, including why some humans still disagree and whether similar cross-species preferences exist for visuals or smells.
Topics:science#animal-behavior#cross-species#nature-sounds#neuroscience#science-tech#sound-perception
- You probably agree with the animals on which bird calls, frog noises and cricket chirps are most attractive – new research The Conversation
- What animal are you? Humans and animals tend to like the same mating calls Scientific American
- Humans and animals have the same preference in mating calls, citizen science experiment finds Phys.org
- Even humans love a good mating call Popular Science
- Screenshot of the "Calls of the Wild" game used in this study (IMAGE) EurekAlert!
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