Researchers from University College London (UK) and colleagues found that listeners gauge the speaker's body size from the frequency of their voice.
Pitch, voice quality and formant spacing jointly signal body size and determine human vocal attractiveness.
Studies of animals and birds reveal that listeners can perceive a caller's body size and intension based on the frequency, voice quality and formant spacing of a call.
For example, low frequency growls are more likely to indicate larger body size, dominance or a potential attack, while higher frequency and pure-tone-like sounds suggest smaller size, submissiveness and fear.
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Female listeners heard a male voice that had been similarly altered to indicate a larger body size.
Results showed that male listeners preferred female voices with high pitch, breathy voice and wide formant spacing that correlated with a smaller body size, while females preferred to hear low-pitched male voices with low pitch and narrow formant spacing that suggested larger body size.
The researchers in the journal PLOS ONE concluded that despite the development of complex language, human vocal interactions still employ certain animal instincts.