Publication | Open Access
Vocal and locomotor coordination develops in association with the autonomic nervous system
22
Citations
66
References
2019
Year
Brain MechanismNeurolinguisticsMotor DevelopmentMotor ControlSocial SciencesAutonomic Nervous SystemKinesiologySpeech Motor ControlPrimate BehaviorMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesHeart RateBehavioral SciencesAutonomic SystemMotor Control BecomeBehavioral NeuroscienceMotor CoordinationNervous SystemBioacousticsNeuroanatomySensorimotor TransformationPhysiologyMotor SystemNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemHuman MovementSpeech PerceptionArousal FluctuationsLocomotor CoordinationAnimal Behavior
In adult animals, movement and vocalizations are coordinated, sometimes facilitating, and at other times inhibiting, each other. What is missing is how these different domains of motor control become coordinated over the course of development. We investigated how postural-locomotor behaviors may influence vocal development, and the role played by physiological arousal during their interactions. Using infant marmoset monkeys, we densely sampled vocal, postural and locomotor behaviors and estimated arousal fluctuations from electrocardiographic measures of heart rate. We found that vocalizations matured sooner than postural and locomotor skills, and that vocal-locomotor coordination improved with age and during elevated arousal levels. These results suggest that postural-locomotor maturity is not required for vocal development to occur, and that infants gradually improve coordination between vocalizations and body movement through a process that may be facilitated by arousal level changes.
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