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Prenatal development of neonatal vocalizations

Author(s): Narayanan, Darshana Z; Takahashi, Daniel Y; Kelly, Lauren M; Hlavaty, Sabina I; Huang, Junzhou; et al

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Abstract: Human and non-human primates produce rhythmical sounds as soon as they are born. These early vocalizations are important for soliciting the attention of caregivers. How they develop remains a mystery. The orofacial movements necessary for producing these vocalizations have distinct spatiotemporal signatures. Therefore, their development could potentially be tracked over the course of prenatal life. We densely and longitudinally sampled fetal head and orofacial movements in marmoset monkeys using ultrasound imaging. We show that orofacial movements necessary for producing rhythmical vocalizations differentiate from a larger movement pattern that includes the entire head. We also show that signature features of marmoset infant contact calls emerge prenatally as a distinct pattern of orofacial movements. Our results establish that aspects of the sensorimotor development necessary for vocalizing occur prenatally, even before the production of sound.
Publication Date: 26-Jul-2022
Electronic Publication Date: 26-Jul-2022
Citation: Narayanan, Darshana Z, Takahashi, Daniel Y, Kelly, Lauren M, Hlavaty, Sabina I, Huang, Junzhou, Ghazanfar, Asif A. (Prenatal development of neonatal vocalizations. eLife, 11 (10.7554/elife.78485
DOI: doi:10.7554/elife.78485
EISSN: 2050-084X
Language: en
Type of Material: Journal Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: eLife
Version: Final published version. This is an open access article.



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