Communication Flashcards
what is communication?
the sending and receiving of information
why do animals communicate?
- long term reasons: to survive and reproduce
- short term reasons: alarms, food, mate attraction
Honeybee dance, karl von Frisch (1919)
- won nobel prize 1973
- honeybees communicate about location of food
- if food < 100m turns in a circel to the left and then the right, continues to alternate for about half a minute, other bees then gather round then fly off
- if food is more than 100m away the bee will waggle from side to side while running in a straight line
- distance of food is indicated by the duration of the waggle run and bearing indicated by the angle of the waggle run
What evidence has been found to support the waggle dance in bees?
- Michelsen et al. (1992) – mechanical bee. Bees use distance and direction info.
- Riley et al. (2005) – used transponders to measure flight paths.
How do Vervet monkeys use alarm calls to communicate, Struhsaker (1967)
- observations in Amboseli national park in Kenya
- Found 21 distinct messages from 3 major predators (leopards, snakes, eagles)
- study found monkeys have different acoustic signals to signal for each predator
- when experimenters played the alarm calls even when no predators around, monkeys still responded
alarm calls in meerkats, Manser (2001)
- found they have different alarm calls depending on the type of predator (aerial, terrestrial, recruitment)
- calls also include information about the level of urgency e.g. if the predator was far away the urgency is low
what are the 4 language criteria? Pearce (2008)
Arbitrariness of units
- e.g., words usually randomly represent an event.
Semanticity
- there is a meaning.
Displacement
- communication about events distant in time or space.
Productivity
- structured according to rules but can be used flexibly.
ASL in apes, Gardner & Gardner (1969)
- Washeo the chimp
- used shaping and instrumental conditioning on a chimpanzee to learn ASL
- after 5 years of training 132 signs were allegedly learnt
- words learnt includes, pronouns, verbs, and chimp could also allegedly combine signs e.g. ‘water and ‘bird’ for a swan
ASL in apes, Terrace et al (1979)
- chim, Nim, learnt 125 signs by the end of the project
- chimp could produce linear combinations, and could combine 1.1-1.6 words
chimps learning using visual symbols, Premack and Premack (1972)
- Yerkish (Duane Rumbaugh)
- Lana (chimpanzee) trained to use a keyboard.
- Symbols (lexigrams) have symbolic value but are arbitrary
- Sarah (chimpanzee; David Premack) Plastic tokens, again arbitrary.
- Rivas (2005) – studied sign use by chimpanzees.
86% were requests.
Dolphins and sentences, Herman, Richards, and Wolz (1984)
- Dolphin Akeakamai trained to perform a gesture and rewarded if performed it correctly
- had an observer watch the behaviour wthout knowing what it should be
- one test was a displace reference test, the dolphin had to find an object before she could perform a gesture. Action (81.4% correct).
- also tested on sementically reversible sentences that the dolphin must understand to complete. e.g. HOOP FETCH PIPE (go to hoop & take it to the pipe), PIPE FETCH HOOP (go to the pipe and take it to the hoop). 52.4% correct (0 reversal errors).