Have I Mentioned I'm a Bass?
This study deserves wide distribution.
Deep-voiced men father more children
Roxanne Khamsi, New Scientist, 25 September 2007In evolutionary terms, Barry White's rich, bass voice may hit all the right notes – a new study among modern-day hunter-gatherers shows that men with the deepest voices produce significantly more children. [...]
Scientists have long known that women perceive men with deep voices as sexy, healthier, and more dominant. Previous studies have even shown that women show the strongest preference for low-pitched voices at the most fertile phase in their menstrual cycle.
This background research hinted that men with the deepest voices had the most luck with the ladies, giving them an evolutionary edge. However, the use of modern-day contraceptives makes it difficult to link voice range with fertility. So experts lacked hard evidence to back up the notion that men with bass voices had any real reproductive advantage over those talking in tenor tones.
'Huge difference'
Coren Apicella at Harvard [...] and her colleagues found a way around this challenge by studying the Hadza, one of the last remaining hunter-gatherer cultures in the world. [...] The Hadza, who live in Tanzania, have no modern birth control and practice serial monogamy.
Apicella recorded 49 Hadza men saying the Swahili word hujambo, which loosely translates as ‘hello’ in English, and calculated their voice pitch using computer analysis. She also recorded their age and the number of children they had fathered.
On average, the men had 4.8 children and a voice pitch of around 115 Hz. After controlling for possible confounding factors, such as age, researchers discovered that men with the lowest voices had the most children. For example, men who had an average voice pitch around 90 Hz had about two more children on average than those with a super-high voice around 160 Hz. "That's a huge difference" in terms of reproductive success, says David Puts, an anthropologist at Penn State [...] who studies voice preferences.
Puts explains that men typically have deep voices as a result of high testosterone levels. High levels of this hormone cause the vocal cords to lengthen and thicken, and therefore vibrate at a lower frequency. "Testosterone is associated with all sorts of things, like high libido and physical competitive ability," Puts notes. He adds that there appears to be a connection between testosterone and sperm quality, which might explain why the Hadza men with low-pitched voices fathered the most children. [...]
However, Apicella notes that some of the children listed by the Hadza men as being their own might have in fact been fathered by other members of the group. This, she says, allows for an alternate explanation for her findings: "Maybe men with lower pitched voices feel more confident to say the children are theirs."
h/t A Cappella News



This is quite fascinating. So why were castrati cast in heroic roles for so many years? Why are baroque operas full of high voices, and why have lower voices become more dominant as the centuries have passed?
Congrats on the children you'll be fathering/claiming, by the way. Let us know if you want any baby showers or suchlike.
Posted by: patrick | Oct 04, 2007 at 03:36 PM
If I were a carpenter
And you were a lady
Would you marry me anyway
Would you have my baby
Would you marry me anyway
And have my babyyyyyyyyyyyyy
Gosh, Sid, I thought you'd never ask.
Posted by: sfmike | Oct 04, 2007 at 04:34 PM