Research led by Western Sydney University, Australia, has found that boys singing in a choir engage in simultaneous group cohesion and sexually motivated competition exhibited through voice modulation in the presence of a female audience.
In a paper, “Sex-related communicative functions of voice spectral energy in human chorusing,” published in The journal Biology Letters, the team explores the evolutionary origins of music, suggesting that it may have developed from capacities supporting both cooperation and competition.
Similar to interactive displays in non-human animals, human music may function both cooperatively and competitively, allowing different forms of communication to occur simultaneously at both group and individual levels.
The St Thomas Choir of Leipzig was studied to understand how male singers modify their behavior in the presence of female audience members. A previous study with the boy choir found that basses (the oldest boys with the deepest voices) exhibited increased energy in the “singer’s formant” frequency region when girls were in the audience.
The study, conducted online, involved listening tasks to test female and male sensitivity and preferences for this subtle vocal modulation in choir performances. The study involved 679 females and 481 males in the sensitivity study and 655 females and 432 males in the preference study, with varying ages and musical training.
2023-11-10 19:41:02
Link from phys.org