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-   -   Neanderthals Speak Again (http://zelaron.com/forum/showthread.php?t=45501)

Demosthenes 2008-04-21 03:37 PM

Neanderthals Speak Again
 
Dr. Robert McCarthy, an assistant professor of anthropology in the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters at Florida Atlantic University, has reconstructed vocal tracts that simulate the sound of the Neanderthal voice.

Using 50,000-year-old fossils from France and a computer synthesizer, McCarthy’s team has generated a recording of how a Neanderthal would pronounce the letter “e.” The brief recording doesn’t sound like any letter in modern languages, but McCarthy says that’s because Neanderthals lacked the “quantal vowels” modern humans use. Quantal vowels provide cues that help speakers with different size vocal tracts understand one another.

“They would have spoken a bit differently,” McCarthy said at the annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Columbus, Ohio in April. “They wouldn't have been able to produce these quantal vowels that form the basis of spoken language.”

Though quantal vowels make subtle differences in speech, their absence would have limited Neanderthal speech. For example, Neanderthals would not be able to distinguish between the words ‘beat’ and ‘bit.’

For scientists, McCarthy’s work represents an exploration of life 30,000 years ago when Neanderthal humans, our closest extinct ancestor, lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East. The species died out mysteriously some 28,000 years ago.

McCarthy has plans to eventually simulate an entire Neanderthal sentence.

McCarthy's simulation of a Neanderthal voice is available here.

D3V 2008-04-21 03:38 PM

* That's a cool find, "uh"

FAU is a great University.

Sovereign 2008-04-21 09:29 PM

Sounds like a burp. Pretty cool though.

Asamin 2008-04-22 08:30 AM

Why are we so interested in them? Will it teach us anything about our species?

Wallow 2008-04-24 02:05 PM

It seems that by studying about things in the past, it distracts one from the corrupted world of the present, even if it is about how a caveman spoke.

Kaneda 2008-04-25 11:50 PM

lol nice philosophy there Why but I think
It's called...


Evolution

Demosthenes 2008-04-26 11:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Why
It seems that by studying about things in the past, it distracts one from the corrupted world of the present, even if it is about how a caveman spoke.

I'm a fan of knowledge for the sake of knowledge. If you're not, then there are many practical applications that come out of pure theoretical research that can not possibly be forseen.


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