Communication Flashcards

1
Q

what is communication?

A

the sending and receiving of information

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2
Q

why do animals communicate?

A
  • long term reasons: to survive and reproduce
  • short term reasons: alarms, food, mate attraction
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3
Q

Honeybee dance, karl von Frisch (1919)

A
  • 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
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4
Q

What evidence has been found to support the waggle dance in bees?

A
  • Michelsen et al. (1992) – mechanical bee. Bees use distance and direction info.
  • Riley et al. (2005) – used transponders to measure flight paths.
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5
Q

How do Vervet monkeys use alarm calls to communicate, Struhsaker (1967)

A
  • 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
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6
Q

alarm calls in meerkats, Manser (2001)

A
  • 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
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7
Q

what are the 4 language criteria? Pearce (2008)

A

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.

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8
Q

ASL in apes, Gardner & Gardner (1969)

A
  • 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
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9
Q

ASL in apes, Terrace et al (1979)

A
  • chim, Nim, learnt 125 signs by the end of the project
  • chimp could produce linear combinations, and could combine 1.1-1.6 words
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10
Q

chimps learning using visual symbols, Premack and Premack (1972)

A
  • 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.
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11
Q

Dolphins and sentences, Herman, Richards, and Wolz (1984)

A
  • 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).
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