Brumm, H.; Farrington, H.; Petren, K.; Fessl, B.: Evolutionary dead end in the Galapagos: Divergence of sexual signals in the rarest of Darwin's finches. PLoS One 5 (6), e11191 (2010)
Brumm, H.; Lachlan, R. F.; Riebel, K.; Slater, P. J. B.: On the function of song type repertoires: Testing the "antiexhaustion hypothesis" in chaffinches. Animal Behaviour 77 (1), S. 37 - 42 (2009)
Brumm, H.; Zollinger, S. A.; Slater, P. J. B.: Developmental stress affects song learning but not song complexity and vocal amplitude in zebra finches. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 63 (9), S. 1387 - 1395 (2009)
Nemeth, E.; Brumm, H.: Blackbirds sing higher-pitched songs in cities: Adaptation to habitat acoustics or side-effect of urbanization? Animal Behaviour 78 (3), S. 637 - 641 (2009)
Samarra, F. I. P.; Klappert, K.; Brumm, H.; Miller, P. J. O.: Background noise constrains communication: Acoustic masking of courtship song in the fruit fly Drosophila montana. Behaviour 146 (12), S. 1635 - 1648 (2009)
Brumm, H.: Signalling through acoustic windows: Nightingales avoid interspecific competition by short-term adjustment of song timing. Journal of Comparative Physiology A-Neuroethology Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology 192, S. 1279 - 1285 (2006)
Brumm, H.; Slater, P. J. B.: Animals can vary signal amplitude with receiver distance: Evidence from zebra finch song. Animal Behaviour 72 (3), S. 699 - 705 (2006)
Brumm, H.; Slater, P. J. B.: Ambient noise, motor fatigue and serial redundancy in chaffinch song. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 60 (4), S. 475 - 481 (2006)
Brumm, H.; Kipper, S.; Riechelmann, C.; Todt, D.: Do Barbary macaques "comment" on what they see? A first report on vocalizations accompanying interactions of third parties. Primates 46 (2), S. 141 - 144 (2005)
Brumm, H.: Causes and consequences of song amplitude adjustment in a territorial bird: A case study in nightingales. Annals of the Brazilian Academy of Science 76, S. 289 - 296 (2004)
Brumm, H.; Todt, D.: Male-male vocal interactions and the adjustment of song amplitude in a territorial bird. Animal Behaviour 67 (2), S. 281 - 286 (2004)
Brumm, H.; Voß, K.; Köllmer, I.; Todt, D.: Acoustic communication in noise: Regulation of call characteristics in a New World monkey. The Journal of Experimental Biology 207 (3), S. 443 - 448 (2004)
Brumm, H.; Hultsch, H.: Pattern amplitude is related to pattern imitation during the vocal development of nightingales. Animal Behaviour 61 (4), S. 747 - 754 (2001)
Todt, D.; Brumm, H.: Vigilance, windows and virtual sign stimuli: Psycho-biological aspects of video watching. Paragrana: International Journal for Historical Anthropology 10, S. 173 - 195 (2001)
Brumm, H.; Zollinger, S. A.: Avian vocal production in noise. In: Animal communication and noise. Animal signals and communication 2, S. 187 - 227 (Hg. Brumm, H.). Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg (2013)
Gil, D.; Brumm, H.: Acoustic communication in the urban environment: Patterns, mechanisms, and potential consequences of avian song adjustments. In: Avian urban ecology. Behavioural and physiological adaptations, S. 69 - 83 (Hg. Gil, D.; Brumm, H.). Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013)
Siemers, B. M.; Kalko, E. K. V.; Brumm, H.: Perspektiven der Verhaltensbiologie. In: Höhepunkte der zoologischen Forschung, S. 181 - 203 (Hg. Wägele, J. W.). Basilisken Presse, Marburg (2007)
Brumm, H.: Einsatz und Design von Playbackexperimenten. In: Methoden der Verhaltensbiologie, S. 163 - 168 (Hg. Naguib, M.). Springer Verlag, Heidelberg (2006)
Bei Zebrafinken fällt kein Meistersänger vom Himmel. Jeder Jungvogel muss zunächst eine Gesangsschule durchlaufen. Singvögel sind deshalb gute Modellorganismen dafür, wie Lernvorgänge im Tierreich ablaufen