Whispering is an unvoiced mode of phonation in which the vocal cords are abducted so that they do not vibrate; air passes between the arytenoid cartilages to create audible turbulence during speech. Supralaryngeal articulation remains the same as in normal speech.
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Read More »The prevalence and function of low-amplitude signaling by non-humans are poorly characterized.[9] As such, it is difficult to ascertain the existence of whispering in non-humans. This is made more difficult by the specific physiology of human whispering. By sufficiently relaxing the definition of whispering, it can be argued any number of non-human species demonstrate whisper-like behaviors. Often these behaviors function to increase fitness.[9] If whispering is more broadly defined as the "production of short-range, low-amplitude acoustic signals," whispering is observed in myriad animals including non-human mammals, fish, and insects.[9] If whispering is restricted to include only acoustic signals which are significantly different than those produced at high amplitude, whispering is still observed across biological taxa.[9] An unlikely example is the croaking gourami. Croaking gouramis produce a high-amplitude "croak" during agonistic disputes by beating specialized pectoral fins.[10] Female gouramis additionally use these fins to produce an acoustically distinct, low-amplitude "purr" during copulation.[11] If whispering is restricted to include only creatures possessing vocal folds (i.e., mammals and some reptiles),[12] whispering has been observed in species including cotton-top tamarins and a variety of bats.[9] In captive cotton-top tamarins, whisper-like behavior is speculated to enable troop communication while not alerting predators.[a][13] Numerous species of bats (e.g., spotted bats,[14] northern long-eared bats,[15] and western barbastelles)[16] alter their echolocation calls[b] to avoid detection by prey.[c] Such a relaxed definition of whispering (i.e., production of short-range, low-amplitude acoustic signals which are significantly different than those produced at high amplitude) cannot be applied to humans without including vocalizations distinct from human whispering (e.g., creaky voice, and falsetto). Further research is needed to ascertain the existence of whispering in non-humans as established in the larger article.
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