Saturday, February 5, 2011

Prairie Dog Language





I should have seen this.  Five years ago I linked the development of large social groups with the development of human language.  One supported the other.  This factor is now been more and more recognized in wild populations such as crows in particular.

Now we come to the much larger prairie dog brain and the use of large communal colonies. Their descriptive language is obviously quite powerful and this report indicates greater than 100 words.  Yet recall that 100 words are sufficient to anchor you in any human language.  That is enough to make thirty percent known and the balance on the way to been intelligible.

Here we discover that a prairie dog can call out a description of an intruder which is rather valuable information.  It gives us no information of ordinary communication needs but suggests that is way more developed here than would seem likely.

It is interesting that abstract shapes are also described.  A lot of easy assumptions and bad guesses just got trashed and we will have to revisit every species to properly observe their modes of communication.



Prairie dogs have a language all of their own and 'can describe what humans look like'


Last updated at 5:49 PM on 21st January 2011


It's a language that would twist the tongue of even the most sophisticated linguist.
Prairie dogs talk to each other and can describe what different human beings look like, according to scientists.

The species - only found in North America - call out to warn their friends when a predator approaches their habitat.

Rodent species: Prairie dogs - only found in North America - call out to warn their friends when a predator approaches their habitat, scientists believe

Not only that, but they have calls for 'human', one for 'hawk' and another for 'coyote', radio station NPR reports.

Professor Con Slobodchikoff, of Northern Arizona University, has been studying prairie dogs for 30 years.

He is particularly interested in deciphering their language because to do so would 'open the door for understanding how other species communicate'.

The prairie dog's barks, yips and chirping sounds are really a sophisticated form of communication that contains a vocabulary of at least 100 words, Professor Slobodchikoff claims.

'The little yips prairie dogs make contain a lot of information,' he said.

Professor Con Slobodchikoff, of Northern Arizona University, has been studying prairie dogs for 30 years

'They can describe details of predators such as their size, shape, colour and how fast they are going.

'They also can discriminate whether an approaching animal is a coyote or a dog, and they can decipher different types of birds.'

Professor Slobodchikoff and his students hid themselves in prairie dog villages and recorded the noises the rodents made whenever a human, hawk, dog or coyote passed through.

What they found was that the prairie dog issues different calls depending on the intruder. The researchers discovered this by analysing the recorded calls for frequency and tone. 

They concluded that it doesn't have one call for 'danger', rather it has a collection of warning noises - or a language.

To further develop this line of investigation, Professor Slobodchikoff gathered four volunteers and had them walk through a prairie dog village four times. On each occasion they wore the same clothing, except for different colour shirts.

The prairie dogs responded by issuing different calls, depending on the colour of the volunteers' shirts.

Professor Slobodchikoff then discovered they also issued different calls for varying heights, and even for abstract shapes including cardboard circles, squares and triangles.

He told NPR: 'Essentially they were saying, "Here comes the tall human in the blue," versus, "Here comes the short human in the yellow."'


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