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Dive into the research topics where Karen McComb is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen McComb.


Animal Behaviour | 2003

Anatomical constraints generate honesty: acoustic cues to age and weight in the roars of red deer stags

David Reby; Karen McComb

Early work on loud calling in mammals emphasized the importance of dynamic characteristics such as calling rate as cues to fitness and fighting ability. In contrast, little is known of the potential for fine-scaled acoustic cues to provide receivers with direct information on fitness. Fundamental frequency has typically been considered a good potential indicator of body size in the literature, but resonance frequencies (formants), which should be constrained by the length of the vocal tract, have received less attention. We conducted a detailed acoustic analysis on an extensive database of roars from red deer stags, Cervus elaphus, in a free-ranging population to investigate which variables provided honest information on age, body weight and reproductive success. Although fundamental frequency was higher in young stags than in adults, it did not decrease with body weight within adults and source cues (i.e. those generated by the larynx) in general did not provide clear information on fitness-related characteristics. In contrast, minimum formant frequencies, reached during the part of the roar when the mobile larynx is most fully retracted towards the sternum, decreased with body weight and age and were strongly negatively correlated with our index of reproductive success. Such production-related acoustic cues to body size and fitness, rendered honest by an anatomical constraint limiting the downward movement of the larynx, provide receivers with accurate information that could be used to assess rivals and choose mates.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2005

Red deer stags use formants as assessment cues during intrasexual agonistic interactions

David Reby; Karen McComb; Bruno Cargnelutti; C. J. Darwin; W. Tecumseh Fitch; T. H. Clutton-Brock

While vocal tract resonances or formants are key acoustic parameters that define differences between phonemes in human speech, little is known about their function in animal communication. Here, we used playback experiments to present red deer stags with re-synthesized vocalizations in which formant frequencies were systematically altered to simulate callers of different body sizes. In response to stimuli where lower formants indicated callers with longer vocal tracts, stags were more attentive, replied with more roars and extended their vocal tracts further in these replies. Our results indicate that mammals other than humans use formants in vital vocal exchanges and can adjust their own formant frequencies in relation to those that they hear.


Animal Behaviour | 1991

Female choice for high roaring rates in red deer, Cervus elaphus

Karen McComb

Red deer males roar loudly and repeatedly during the breeding season. A series of playback experiments, carried out on farmed red deer in New Zealand, revealed that females preferred a high to a low roaring rate, but not low-pitched to high-pitched roars. In free-ranging red deer, fundamental frequency (the main determinant of roar pitch) is not related to body weight or reproductive success, whereas roaring rate is positively associated with both reproductive success and fighting ability. Female choice for males with high roaring rates may either reflect a selection pressure on females to mate with males that are successful in contests with other males or show that females mate with males that are easy to locate. Females also preferred the roar bout that was delivered first in a sequence, suggesting that they may prefer stags that initiate bouts of roaring. This is the first study to demonstrate experimentally that vocal characteristics of male mammals can influence the females choice of mating partner.


Biology Letters | 2005

Coevolution of vocal communication and sociality in primates

Karen McComb; Stuart Semple

Understanding the rules that link communication and social behaviour is an essential prerequisite for discerning how a communication system as complex as human language might have evolved. The comparative method offers a powerful tool for investigating the nature of these rules, since it provides a means to examine relationships between changes in communication abilities and changes in key aspects of social behaviour over evolutionary time. Here we present empirical evidence from phylogenetically controlled analyses indicating that evolutionary increases in the size of the vocal repertoire among non-human primate species were associated with increases in both group size and time spent grooming (our measure of extent of social bonding).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Cross-modal individual recognition in domestic horses (Equus caballus).

Leanne Proops; Karen McComb; David Reby

Individual recognition is considered a complex process and, although it is believed to be widespread across animal taxa, the cognitive mechanisms underlying this ability are poorly understood. An essential feature of individual recognition in humans is that it is cross-modal, allowing the matching of current sensory cues to identity with stored information about that specific individual from other modalities. Here, we use a cross-modal expectancy violation paradigm to provide a clear and systematic demonstration of cross-modal individual recognition in a nonhuman animal: the domestic horse. Subjects watched a herd member being led past them before the individual went of view, and a call from that or a different associate was played from a loudspeaker positioned close to the point of disappearance. When horses were shown one associate and then the call of a different associate was played, they responded more quickly and looked significantly longer in the direction of the call than when the call matched the herd member just seen, an indication that the incongruent combination violated their expectations. Thus, horses appear to possess a cross-modal representation of known individuals containing unique auditory and visual/olfactory information. Our paradigm could provide a powerful way to study individual recognition across a wide range of species.


Biology Letters | 2007

Female red deer prefer the roars of larger males

Benjamin D. Charlton; David Reby; Karen McComb

Surprisingly little is known about the role of acoustic cues in mammal female mate choice. Here, we examine the response of female red deer (Cervus elaphus) to male roars in which an acoustic cue to body size, the formants, has been re-scaled to simulate different size callers. Our results show that oestrous red deer hinds prefer roars simulating larger callers and constitute the first evidence that female mammals use an acoustic cue to body size in a mate choice context. We go on to suggest that sexual selection through female mating preferences may have provided an additional selection pressure along with male–male competition for broadcasting size-related information in red deer and other mammals.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2011

Leadership in elephants: the adaptive value of age

Karen McComb; Graeme Shannon; Sarah M. Durant; Katito Sayialel; Rob Slotow; Joyce H. Poole; Cynthia F. Moss

The value of age is well recognized in human societies, where older individuals often emerge as leaders in tasks requiring specialized knowledge, but what part do such individuals play in other social species? Despite growing interest in how effective leadership might be achieved in animal social systems, the specific role that older leaders may play in decision-making has rarely been experimentally investigated. Here, we use a novel playback paradigm to demonstrate that in African elephants (Loxodonta africana), age affects the ability of matriarchs to make ecologically relevant decisions in a domain critical to survival—the assessment of predatory threat. While groups consistently adjust their defensive behaviour to the greater threat of three roaring lions versus one, families with younger matriarchs typically under-react to roars from male lions despite the severe danger they represent. Sensitivity to this key threat increases with matriarch age and is greatest for the oldest matriarchs, who are likely to have accumulated the most experience. Our study provides the first empirical evidence that individuals within a social group may derive significant benefits from the influence of an older leader because of their enhanced ability to make crucial decisions about predatory threat, generating important insights into selection for longevity in cognitively advanced social mammals.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2000

Perception of female reproductive state from vocal cues in a mammal species

Stuart Semple; Karen McComb

While acoustic signalling by males is known to affect male–male competition, mate attraction and the timing of ovulation, the extent to which sexual selection has shaped the evolution of female acoustic signals is poorly understood. Among mammals, experimental evidence indicates that females attract mating partners by using olfactory and visual signals to advertise their reproductive state. Whether or not males ascertain female reproductive state from vocal signals has, however, never been systematically tested. In this study, we use playbacks of recorded vocalizations to demonstrate that male Barbary macaques, Macaca sylvanus, can discriminate between female copulation calls given at different stages of the oestrous cycle, responding more strongly to those given around the time when conception is most likely to occur. Acoustic analysis suggests that the mean dominant frequency of call units and a number of temporal parameters could provide males with the information necessary to discern the proximity of ovulation in this way. Our results provide the first experimental evidence that the calls of female mammals may contain information on reproductive state, which males can perceive and use in such a way as to increase their reproductive success.


Animal Cognition | 2010

Attributing attention: the use of human-given cues by domestic horses (Equus caballus)

Leanne Proops; Karen McComb

Recent research has shown that domestic dogs are particularly good at determining the focus of human attention, often outperforming chimpanzees and hand-reared wolves. It has been suggested that the close evolutionary relationship between humans and dogs has led to the development of this ability; however, very few other domestic species have been studied. We tested the ability of 36 domestic horses to discriminate between an attentive and inattentive person in determining whom to approach for food. The cues provided were body orientation, head orientation or whether the experimenters’ eyes were open or closed. A fourth, mixed condition was included where the attentive person stood with their body facing away from the subjects but their head turned towards the subject while the inattentive person stood with their body facing the subject but their head turned away. Horses chose the attentive person significantly more often using the body cue, head cue, and eye cue but not the mixed cue. This result suggests that domestic horses are highly sensitive to human attentional cues, including gaze. The possible role of evolutionary and environmental factors in the development of this ability is discussed.


Advances in The Study of Behavior | 2003

Vocal communication and reproduction in deer.

David Reby; Karen McComb

Publisher Summary Despite their reputation for being elusive, deer are in fact highly vocal animals. The study of vocal communication and reproduction in deer has revealed that males produce an unusually diverse array of rutting vocalizations, with extreme variation occurring both between and within species. Conspicuous calls are found in both sexes of all studied species. Deer vocalizations are also notable for their diversity, ranging from dog-like alarm barks to high-pitched, whistle-like mating bugles. The deer species are classified into two broad categories based on the nature of their mating systems that include small, solitary species; and large, gregarious, and polygynous species. The reproductive calls in solitary deer are the mating calls or barking and territoriality; whereas, the reproductive calls in gregarious deer are to compete intensely for females. The chapter also describes the research in progress and future aspects in this area. In deer, the ability of vocal communication appears to have arisen through sexual selection—males lower their larynges to display their vocal tract length and thus their body size to a maximal extent—suggesting that similar selection pressures may have influenced the descent of the larynx in humans.

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Stuart Semple

University of Roehampton

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