TY - DATA T1 - Table 1 from Humans recognize emotional arousal in vocalizations across all classes of terrestrial vertebrates: evidence for acoustic universals PY - 2017/07/13 AU - Piera Filippi AU - Jenna V. Congdon AU - John Hoang AU - Daniel L. Bowling AU - Stephan A. Reber AU - Andrius Pašukonis AU - Marisa Hoeschele AU - Sebastian Ocklenburg AU - Bart de Boer AU - Christopher B. Sturdy AU - Albert Newen AU - Onur Gunturkun UR - https://rs.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Table_1_from_Humans_recognize_emotional_arousal_in_vocalizations_across_all_classes_of_terrestrial_vertebrates_evidence_for_acoustic_universals/5203162 DO - 10.6084/m9.figshare.5203162.v1 L4 - https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/8878789 KW - emotional arousal KW - language evolution KW - vocal communication KW - cross-species communication KW - acoustic universals KW - emotional prosody N2 - Description of the vocalization sample used in our study and, when applicable, of the published studies in which they are described. In column “Non-vocal indicator/s of arousal” we provide references for studies assessing the link between the observed behavior, and physiological or neural response as indicator of arousal state. * See references for details on methods for acoustic recordings ** In the hourglass treefrog, aggressive calls are longer than advertisement calls in duration. Leading males produce aggressive calls in order to increase the chance of being heard by the female (19) *** Medium arousal calls were classified as expressing a relatively higher level of arousal when paired with a call classified as low arousal (suckling context). When paired with a call classified as high arousal (separation context) medium calls were classified as expressing a lower level of arousal. **** Reported indicators of high arousal in African bush elephants: lifted ears, raised head, lifted tail, temporin secretion (53–55). ER -