Sister blog of Physicists of the Caribbean in which I babble about non-astronomy stuff, because everyone needs a hobby

Sunday, 14 October 2018

Do animals have language ?

Nice little video. Since just about every attempt to define us as different from animals has proven to be fatally flawed, I bet this one turns out to be no different. My guess is we haven't yet registered the non-vocal cues animals use to communicate. Not saying they're necessarily having deep, intelligent conversations, but then humans have produced Kayne West, so...

It's a short video, so here's the complete transcript for those who prefer reading.


All animals communicate. Crabs wave their claws at each other to signal that they're healthy and ready to mate. Cuttlefish use pigmented skin cells called chromatophores to create patterns on their skin that act as camouflage or warnings to rivals. Honeybees perform complex dances to let other bees know the location and quality of a food source. All of these animals have impressive communication systems, but do they have language?

To answer that question, we can look at four specific qualities that are often associated with language: discreteness, grammar, productivity, and displacement.

Discreteness means that there is a set of individual units, such as sounds or words, that can be combined to communicate new ideas, like a set of refrigerator poetry magnets you can rearrange to create different phrases.
Grammar provides a system of rules that tells you how to combine those individual units.
Productivity is the ability to use language to create an infinite number of messages.
And displacement is the ability to talk about things that aren't right in front of you, such as past, future, or fictional events.

So, does animal communication exhibit any of these qualities? For crabs and cuttlefish, the answer is no. They don't combine their signals in creative ways. Those signals also don't have to be in a grammatical order, and they only communicate current conditions, like, "I am healthy," or "I am poisonous."

But some animals actually do display some of these properties. Bees use the moves, angle, duration, and intensity of their waggle dance to describe the location and richness of a food source. That source is outside the hive, so they exhibit the property of displacement. They share that language trait with prairie dogs, which live in towns of thousands, and are hunted by coyotes, hawks, badgers, snakes, and humans. Their alarms calls indicate the predator's size, shape, speed, and, even for human predators, what the person is wearing and if he's carrying a gun.

Great apes, like chimps and gorillas, are great communicators, too. Some have even learned a modified sign language. A chimpanzee named Washoe demonstrated discreteness by combining multiple signs into original phrases, like, "Please open. Hurry." Coco, a female gorilla who understands more than 1000 signs, and around 2000 words of spoken English referred to a beloved kitten that had died. In doing so, she displayed displacement, though it's worth noting that the apes in both of these examples were using a human communication system, not one that appeared naturally in the wild.

There are many other examples of sophisticated animal communication, such as in dolphins, which use whistles to identify age, location, names, and gender. They can also understand some grammar in a gestural language researchers use to communicate with them. However, grammar is not seen in the dolphin's natural communication.

While these communication systems may have some of the qualities of language we've identified, none display all four. Even Washoe and Coco's impressive abilities are still outpaced by the language skills of most three-year-old humans. And animals' topics of conversation are usually limited. Bees talk about food, prairie dogs talk about predators, and crabs talk about themselves.

Human language stands alone due to the powerful combination of grammar and productivity, on top of discreteness and displacement. The human brain can take a finite number of elements and create an infinite number of messages. We can craft and understand complex sentences, as well as words that have never been spoken before. We can use language to communicate about an endless range of subjects, talk about imaginary things, and even lie.

Research continues to reveal more and more about animal communication. It may turn out that human language and animal communication aren't entirely different but exist on a continuum. After all, we are all animals.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_1FY5kL_zXU&feature=share

1 comment:

  1. Hey, ta very much for the transcript! Stuff seems to lodge better in my brain, when I read it.

    This reminds me of the David Attenborough doc, where he shows certain species of monkeys that have various warning cries for predators - eagles, leopards and snakes, to name a few. The monkeys, even though there may be a few different kinds, seem to understand each other's warning calls, and react accordingly: down the trees if it's a raptor, up the trees if a leopard, and gang up if the problem is a snake.
    Rudimentary it may be, but I can imagine that human language must have started in a similar fashion.

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