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BASIC HUMAN-ANIMAL COMMUNICATION Basic human-animal communication is easily observed in everyday life. The interactions between pets and their owners, for example, reflect a form of spoken, while not necessarily verbal, dialogue. A dog being scolded does not need to understand every word of its admonishment, but is able to grasp the message by interpreting cues such as the owner's stance, tone of voice, and Body Language . This communication is two-way, as owner's can learn to discern the subtle differences between barks and meows... one hardly has to be a professional animal trainer to tell the difference between the bark of an angry dog defending its home and the happy bark of the same animal while playing. Communication (often nonverbal) is also significant in Equestrian activities such as Dressage . WORD REPETITION IN BIRDS Although the word-repetition skills observed in some birds (most famously Parrot s) should not be mistaken for lingual communication, this tendency has nonetheless influenced fictional portrayals of animal communication, as sentient talking parrots and similar birds are common in children's fiction. For one example, see Iago of Disney's Aladdin . Bruce Thomas Boehner 's book ''Parrot Culture: Our 2,500-Year-Long Fascination with the World's Most Talkative Bird'' explores this issue thoroughly. THE NEXT LEVEL: LANGUAGE Achieving a deeper level of communication between animals and humans has long been a goal of science. Perhaps the most famous example of recent decades has been Koko , a gorilla who is supposedly able to communicate with humans using a system based on American Sign Language , with a "vocabulary" of over 1000 words. John Lilly and Cetacean Communication In the 1960s, John Lilly , M.D., prolific Writer and explorer of Consciousness via the Isolation Tank (his invention) and LSD , and contemporary and associate of Timothy Leary , began experiments in the Virgin Islands aiming to establish meaningful communication between humans and the Bottlenose Dolphin ( Tursiops Truncatus ). Lilly financed, mostly personally, a human-dolphin cohabitat, a house on the ocean's shore that contained an area that was partially flooded and allowed a human and dolphin to live together in the same space, sharing meals, play, language lessons, and even sleep. Two experiments of this sort are explained in detail in Lilly's popular books (see John Lilly for bibliography). The first experiment was more of a test run to check psychological and other strains on the human and cetacean participants, determining the extent of the need for other human contact, dry clothing, time alone, and so on. Despite tensions after several weeks, the experimenter (Margaret SOMETHING, someone please correct) agreed to a two-and-a-half month experiment, living isolated with 'Peter' dolphin. A basic outline of Peter dolphin's linguistic progress is as follows: early lessons involved mostly noise and interruptions from Peter during English lessons, and a food reward of fish was necessary for him to 'attend class.' After several weeks, a concerted effort by Peter to imitate the instructor's speech was evident, and human-like sounds were apparent, and recorded. More interesting was the dolphin's immediate grasp of basic Semantics , such as the different aural indicators for 'ball' and 'doll' and other toys present in the aquarium. Peter was able to perform tasks such as retrieval on the (aurally) indicated object without fail. Later in the project the dolphin's ability to process linguistic Syntax was made apparent, in that Peter could distinguish between the commands (e.g. only) "Bring the ball to the doll," and "Bring the doll to the ball." This ability not only demonstrates the bottlenose dolphin's grasp of basic Grammar , but also implies the dolphins' own language must include some such syntactical rules. The correlation between length and 'syllables' (bursts of the dolphin's sound) with the instructor's speech also went from essentially zero at the beginning of the session to almost a perfect correlation by its completion. I.e., a sentence spoken by the instructor involving 35 syllables and lasting 8 seconds would be met with an 8-second burst of sound from Peter dolphin involving 35 easily-discernible 'syllables' or bursts of sound. The linguistic results are fascinating and encouraging, though Lilly soon disbanded the group and halted his dolphin research, not because of a lack of interest or promising results, but because in his own opinion it was first of all wrong to capture and imprison such an intelligent and personable species, regardless of the quality of aquariums or trainers, and secondly that it was in fact humans who were not ready for the revelations of communication with a highly evolved group such as tursiops. His belief that the general darkness and weightlessness of the ocean provides a naturally meditative state for intelligent creatures, and this belief impelled him to invent the Isolation Tank in which a human can safely have a similar experience. Much later, experiments by in Honolulu , Hawaii , focuses exclusively on the Humpback Whale . Psychic animal communicators Animal communication as entertainment Though animal communication has always been a topic of public comment and attention, for a period in history it surpassed this and became sensational popular entertainment. From the late 1700s through the mid 19th century, a succession of pigs and various other animals were displayed to the public in for-profit performances, boasting the ability to communicate with their owners (often in more than one language), write, solve math problems, and the like. One poster dated 1817 shows a group of "Java Sparrow s" who are advertised as knowing ''seven languages'', including Chinese and Russian . One pig of the era was so famous that it performed for royalty, and an obituary upon its death claimed that it made more money than any actor or actress of the same time; a fact that, whether strictly true, was at least believable to contemporary readers. By the late 1840s the fad had died down considerably. While the occasional appearance by a "learned" animal continued into the radio and television eras, it was by then generally understood that feats such as using cards to spell words, barking or tapping a hoof to solve equations, and the like were the products of training rather than actual ''communication''. Though the tradition continues to this day on the "Stupid Pet Tricks" segment of Late Night With David Letterman , it seems likely that the era of trained pigs entertaining the crowned heads of Europe are over. BowLingual One real-world example of a technological means of one-way human-animal communication is BowLingual, a Japanese device which claims to translate barks from dozens of different breeds of dogs, including mixed-breeds. Based largely on Dr. Matsumi Suzuki's Animal Emotion Analysis System developed at Japan Acoustic Laboratory, the device outputs one of 200 phrases (grouped into six different moods), supposedly reflecting "meaning" of the dog's bark. The device was apparently successful enough in Japan to be brought to the American market, and was even named one of 2002 's best inventions by Time Magazine . However, reports of the BowLingual's accuracy have been mixed at best, with popular product-review website Epinions giving it a low 1.5 stars average. HUMAN-ANIMAL COMMUNICATION IN CULTURE The concept of human-animal communication has existed in culture for longer than recorded history, being an element of many myths and folk tales of numerous cultures, and continues in modern popular entertainment. This section lists some examples of this, divided by the method of communication (magical/supernatural, innate natural ability, technological, and unspecified/misc). Topics that are beyond the scope of this article and will not be listed here include intraspecies communication (e.g. ''; Blondi of Kingdom Hospital ). Magic and supernatural
Innate ability
Technological
Unspecified and miscellaneous
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