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Talking animal

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A talking animal or speaking animal refers to any form of animal which can speak a human language. Many species or groups of animals have developed a formal language, even through vocal communication between its members, or interspecies, with an understanding of what they are communicating. As well, studies in animal cognition have been very successful in teaching some animals a formalised language, such as sign language with Koko the gorilla. For these reasons, this phenomena is widely discussed and investigated, while skeptics consider the results to be a form of mimicry and the observer-expectancy effect, not true communication.

A very similar perspective of study is talking animals in fiction.

Contents

[edit] On imitation and understanding

Clever Hans performs

The term may have a nearly literal meaning, by referring to animals which can imitate human speech, though not necessarily possessing an understanding of what they may be mimicking. The most common example of this would be parrots, many of which repeat many things nonsensically through exposure. It is an anthropomorphism to call this human speech, as it has no semantic grounding.

Clever Hans was a horse that was claimed to have been able to perform arithmetic and other intellectual tasks. After formal investigation in 1907, psychologist Oskar Pfungst demonstrated that the horse was not actually performing these mental tasks, but was watching the reaction of his human observers. The horse was responding directly to involuntary cues in the body language of the human trainer, who had the faculties to solve each problem, with the trainer unaware that he was providing such cues.[1]

[edit] Reported cases by species

[edit] Birds

Research done by Dr. Irene Pepperberg strongly suggests that parrots are capable of speaking in context and with intentional meaning. Pepperberg's star pupil, Alex the African Grey Parrot, had demonstrated the ability to assemble words out of letters--in other words, to read and spell before he died in 2007.

[edit] Dogs

  • Odie, the talking pug that will say a convincing "I love you" on demand has made appearances on Letterman and on The Montel Show and on AOL's "T.V. top 5".[2]
  • Paranormal researcher Charles Fort wrote in his book Wild Talents (1932) of several alleged cases of dogs that could speak English. Fort took the stories from contemporary newspaper counts, but they are unverifiable at this late date.

[edit] Cats

  • A talking cat called Cingene (Gypsy) made Turkish television news on March 20 1993. The two year old black cat managed to say at least seven words on television. [3]
  • A more recent Internet phenomenon is the case of a cat who was videotaped speaking recognizable human words and phrases such as "Oh my dog," "Oh Don piano", and "All the live long day." Footage of this cat, nicknamed "Oh Long Johnson" from one of the phrases spoken, was featured on America's Funniest Home Videos in 1998, and a longer version of the clip (which revealed the animal was speaking to another cat) was later aired in the UK. Clips from this video are prevalent on YouTube.

[edit] Other

  • Batyr (1969–1993), an elephant from Kazakhstan, was widely published as having a vocabulary of more than 20 phrases. Recordings of Batyr saying "Batyr is good","Batyr is hungry" and using words such as "drink" and "give" was played on Kazakh state radio in 1980.[3]
  • Kosik (1990— ), an elephant able to imitate some Korean words

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Clever Hans phenomenon". skepdic. http://skepdic.com/cleverhans.html. Retrieved on 2008-12-11. 
  2. ^ "the talking pug". http://www.thetalkingpug.com/. Retrieved on 2008-12-11. 
  3. ^ a b "Conversing cows and eloquent elephants". fortunecity.com. http://www.fortunecity.com/emachines/e11/86/fortean1.html. Retrieved on 2008-12-11. 
  4. ^ Biographical details for Hoover at the website for the New England Aquarium (accessed May 19, 2008).

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