Humans share acoustic preferences with other animals
Summary
Many animals produce courtship sounds, and receivers prefer some sounds over others. Shared ancestry and convergent evolution may generate similarities in preference across species and underlie Darwin's conjecture that some animals "have nearly the same taste for the beautiful as we have." In this study, we show that humans share acoustic preferences with a range of animals, that the strength of human preferences correlates with that in other animals, and that humans respond faster when in
Content
# Humans share acoustic preferences with other animals
*Published: 2026 Mar 19*
Many animals produce courtship sounds, and receivers prefer some sounds over
others. Shared ancestry and convergent evolution may generate similarities in
preference across species and underlie Darwin's conjecture that some animals
"have nearly the same taste for the beautiful as we have." In this study, we
show that humans share acoustic preferences with a range of animals, that the
strength of human preferences correlates with that in other animals, and that
humans respond faster when in agreement with animals. Furthermore, we found
greatest agreement in preference for adorned, ancestral, and lower-frequency
sounds. Humans' music listening experience was associated with preferences.
These results are consistent with theories arguing that biases in processing
sculpt acoustic preferences, and they confirm Darwin's century-old hunch about
the conservation of aesthetics in nature.
DOI: 10.1126/science.aea1202