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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Hear Res. 2016 Aug 3;341:1–8. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2016.07.006

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Comparison of FDLs obtained from the current study (“Marmoset, 2016”, solid red line) with FDLs of other primate species measured by previous studies (squirrel monkey [Wienicke et al., 2001; Capps and Ades, 1968], owl monkey [Recanzone et al., 1991], Old World monkeys [Prosen et al., 1990], Cercopithecinae [Sinnott et al., 1992; Sinnott et al., 1987; Sinnott et al., 1985; Stebbins, 1973], Chimpanzee [Kojima, 1990], and human [Sinnott et al., 1992; Sinnott et al., 1987; Sinnott et al., 1985; Wier et al., 1977]). In general, humans show the lowest FDLs, followed by non-human apes and Old World monkeys. New World monkeys show the largest FDLs compared to other primates.