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Group Members: Ahsen Aamir Murad Jawaria Hameed Kanza Afzal Saad Nasir Chandna
Communication
Communication consists of exchanges of information between a sender and a receiver using a code of specific signals that usually serve to meet common challenges (reproduction, feeding, protection) and, in group-living species, to promote cohesiveness of the group. (Vauclair,1996)
Characteristics of language
interchangeability specialization discreteness arbitrariness of units displacement semanticity productivity traditional (cultural) transmission
Without question, nonhuman animals DO communicate. Most species send signals, issue warnings, respond to threats, share the location for food etc. While a concept of communication is too broad, a concept of speech is too narrow for considering the form of information transferring in animals.
Approaches
Three main experimental approaches have been employed for studying animals language communication. Direct decoding of animals communication Use of intermediary languages for communication with animals. Application of ideas and concepts of information processing theory.
Two types of natural communication systems have been deciphered till now: Fragments of honeybees dance language Acoustic signalization in various species
The decoded words concern alarm calls, calls for cohesion and signals about food. Honeybees appear to interpret the meaning of messages they receive. The wild acoustic communication does not meet several important linguistic criteria such as displacement and productivity.
An intermediary language is devised to communicate with animals in languagetraining programs. Dialogue with animals has revealed astonishing linguistic potential in them. Properties of developedlanguage such as categorization, creativity and displacement have been observed.
This approach is designed to study quantitative characteristics of natural communicative systems and important properties of animal intelligence. This approach proves that ants,like honeybees, are able to inform their nest mates about remote events,and their communication system is rather rational and flexible.
Bees dance when they have found nectar. Chimpanzees greet each other by touching hands. Prairie dog calls for four predatorshuman, hawk, coyote and domestic dog by different vocal signals. Rhesus macaques produce five acoustically distinctive vocalizations when they find food.
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Article reference: zhanna reznikova Journal: Ebcohost Received: 6 September 2006 / Revised: 22 December 2006 / Accepted: 9 January 2007 / Published online: 3 February 2007 Springer-Verlag and ISPA 2007