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19. HUMANS RECOGNIZE VOCAL EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTIONAL STATES UNIVERSALLY ACROSS SPECIES

32. Do rats ( Rattus norvegicus ) perceive octave equivalence, a critical human cross-cultural aspect of pitch perception?

33. Iterative learning experiments can help elucidate music's origins.

34. A comparison between common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) and human infants sheds light on traits proposed to be at the root of human octave equivalence.

35. Black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) discriminate between naturally-ordered and scramble-ordered chick-a-dee calls and individual preference is related to rate of learning.

36. Lessons learned in animal acoustic cognition through comparisons with humans.

37. Pitch chroma information is processed in addition to pitch height information with more than two pitch-range categories.

38. Cultural evolution: Conserved patterns of melodic evolution across musical cultures.

39. Progress without exclusion in the search for an evolutionary basis of music.

40. Universal principles underlying segmental structures in parrot song and human speech.

41. Is consonance attractive to budgerigars? No evidence from a place preference study.

42. Novel methodology to assess vocal learning in nature.

43. Temporal modulation in speech, music, and animal vocal communication: evidence of conserved function.

44. Common marmosets are sensitive to simple dependencies at variable distances in an artificial grammar.

45. A technological framework for running and analyzing animal head turning experiments.

46. Humans recognize emotional arousal in vocalizations across all classes of terrestrial vertebrates: evidence for acoustic universals.

47. Generalizing prosodic patterns by a non-vocal learning mammal.

49. Animal Pitch Perception: Melodies and Harmonies.

50. Sex Differences in Rhythmic Preferences in the Budgerigar ( Melopsittacus undulatus ): A Comparative Study with Humans.

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