Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Proportion of time vocalising as a metric of vocal activity

Anikin, Andrey LU orcid (2026) In Bioacoustics
Abstract
A fundamental aspect of describing vocal activity is to quantify its overall level. For instance, everyone agrees that animals become more vocal when they are excited or stressed, but what does it mean to be ‘more vocal’? Increased duration of individual calls and their repetition rate are the most commonly reported temporal markers of arousal, but proportion of time [spent] vocalising (PTV) appears to increase with arousal more consistently based on my re-analysis of 43 previous studies. From a perceptual perspective, PTV in combination with loudness is well suited to capture the intensity of auditory stimulation. Indeed, it emerged as the best temporal predictor of how much human listeners were distracted and bothered by repeated sounds... (More)
A fundamental aspect of describing vocal activity is to quantify its overall level. For instance, everyone agrees that animals become more vocal when they are excited or stressed, but what does it mean to be ‘more vocal’? Increased duration of individual calls and their repetition rate are the most commonly reported temporal markers of arousal, but proportion of time [spent] vocalising (PTV) appears to increase with arousal more consistently based on my re-analysis of 43 previous studies. From a perceptual perspective, PTV in combination with loudness is well suited to capture the intensity of auditory stimulation. Indeed, it emerged as the best temporal predictor of how much human listeners were distracted and bothered by repeated sounds in recent psychoacoustic experiments. In addition to average PTV calculated from mean call duration and rate, I propose modelling time-dependent instantaneous PTV using simple assumptions about the relevant time scale of arousal modulation or the duration of echoic auditory memory. Thus defined, PTV is a simple, powerful, intuitive, highly informative, and yet under-utilised metric of vocal activity both on longer time scales and within a single episode or call bout. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Vocal communication, rhythm, temporal structure, proportion of time vocalising, call rate
in
Bioacoustics
pages
16 pages
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:105035404579
ISSN
0952-4622
DOI
10.1080/09524622.2026.2653067
project
LUCS Cognitive Zoology Group
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
00ee92e3-e85e-4fd4-828d-fe95caedcb74
date added to LUP
2026-05-01 05:11:31
date last changed
2026-06-01 10:16:29
@article{00ee92e3-e85e-4fd4-828d-fe95caedcb74,
  abstract     = {{A fundamental aspect of describing vocal activity is to quantify its overall level. For instance, everyone agrees that animals become more vocal when they are excited or stressed, but what does it mean to be ‘more vocal’? Increased duration of individual calls and their repetition rate are the most commonly reported temporal markers of arousal, but proportion of time [spent] vocalising (PTV) appears to increase with arousal more consistently based on my re-analysis of 43 previous studies. From a perceptual perspective, PTV in combination with loudness is well suited to capture the intensity of auditory stimulation. Indeed, it emerged as the best temporal predictor of how much human listeners were distracted and bothered by repeated sounds in recent psychoacoustic experiments. In addition to average PTV calculated from mean call duration and rate, I propose modelling time-dependent instantaneous PTV using simple assumptions about the relevant time scale of arousal modulation or the duration of echoic auditory memory. Thus defined, PTV is a simple, powerful, intuitive, highly informative, and yet under-utilised metric of vocal activity both on longer time scales and within a single episode or call bout.}},
  author       = {{Anikin, Andrey}},
  issn         = {{0952-4622}},
  keywords     = {{Vocal communication; rhythm; temporal structure; proportion of time vocalising; call rate}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Bioacoustics}},
  title        = {{Proportion of time vocalising as a metric of vocal activity}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09524622.2026.2653067}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/09524622.2026.2653067}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}