- Journal of Comparative Psychology 1987, Vol 101, no. 2, 112-125
Determinants of recognition of gestural signs in an artificial
language by atlantic bottle-nosed dolphins (Tursiops truncatus)
and humans (Homo sapiens), (1987).
- Melissa R. Shyan and Louis M. Herman, University of Hawaii at
Manoa
-
- (C) 1987 by the American Psychological Association. Inc.
-
- Responses of Atlantic bottle-nosed dolphins (Tursiops truncatus)
and of humans were collected and analyzed in order to determine
the features required for recognition and discrimination of systematically
modified signs in which sign components were contrasted for competitive
feature salience. One dolphin, with 6 years of training in the
language, was shown these modified signs intermixed with normal
signs in a linguistic, sentnence-comprehension context. A second
dolphin, familiar with action signs only and with no sentence-comnprehension
training, served as a nonlingual control. Human subjects were
tested in two parallel tasks. The dolphin with sign-language experience
attended to (in order of importance) location, completed temporal
pattern, gross motor motion, and direction of motion, as salient
features. Fine motor motion, hand shape, and hand orientation
were less salient. The non-sign-language dolphin attended to all
sign features equally and was unaffected by temporal pattern changes.
Human tested in a linguistic context attended to (in order) gross
motor motion, location, and an interaction of fine motor motion,
hand shape, and hand orientation. Direction of motion and temporal
pattern were not salient. Nonlinguistic-context humans attended
to all sign features equally and were unaffectyed by temporal
pattern changes. Results indicate that language experience and/or
testing context affect feature salinece for sign recognition.
Results also support the notion that there exists a higher order
(general purpose) temporal pattern processor in dolphins in which
visual as well as acoustic input is processed.
-
- Shyan, M. R. and Herman, L. M. (1987). Determinants of recognition
of gestural signs in an artificial language by Atlantic bottle-nosed
dolphins (Tursiops turncatus) and humans (Homo sapiens). Journal
of Comparitive Psychology, 101, 112-125.
Back to Top
Dolphin
Programs | Whale
Programs | Education
Programs | Our Research
| Resource Guide
Copyright © 2002, The Dolphin Institute
|