Animal Grunts Are Structured Like Human Speech

Friday, January 11, 2013 - 11:00 in Psychology & Sociology

Banded Mongoose University of ZurichBasic animal sounds can work sort of like Morse code, containing specific messages. The evolution of speech is a complex story, but one key feature is we humans' ability to form intricate sounds using vowels and consonants. Animals have simpler anatomy, so they can't produce as many distinguishable sounds, instead combining their basic noises into more complicated patterns that become things like birdsong. But it turns out even the monosyllabic noises work like a sort of Morse code, with specific structures that contain different information. Behavioral biologists from the University of Zurich studied banded mongoose in Uganda, observing their behavior and listening to their calls. They recorded contact calls, which only lasted between 50 and 150 milliseconds, and broke them into their constituent parts. The first bit of screechy call works like an identifier, providing information about the animal making the racket. This is important for mongoose...

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