Dolphin
Research: Summaries

seeing through sound

understanding language

understanding questions

communication through television

vigilance

pointing gestures

awareness of one's own behaviors

awareness of one's own body parts

behavioral mimicry

dolphin research publications

whale research
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Communication through Television

Television scenes are in most cases representations of the real world. As human, we recognize this, and interpret and often respond to the scenes as we might to real world events. Most animals, however, do not seem to understand interpret TV images. A dog or cat, for example, rarely displays
Researchers are able to communicate with the dolphin from a remote location via television.
any significant awareness that something meaningful is happening on the television screen. Even chimpanzees, our closest relatives, fail to interpret television scenes spontaneously. When first encountering television, they may act as if they perceive only colors and movement, rather than scenes. Chimpanzees can learn to interpret television scenes appropriately eventually, by observing their human companion responding appropriately. In contrast to the learning process that seems required for chimpanzees, the dolphins at our laboratory proved capable of understanding gestural language instructions given through television images of people the very first time they were exposed to television. We simply directed a dolphin to swim to an underwater window. Behind the window was small television screen displaying a live image of a person using
Dolphin views underwater television screen for instructions.
the gestural language. Each dolphin sent to the window responded appropriately to most of a whole set of instructions given. Furthermore, they subsequently also responded accurately to highly abstracted images, such as the disembodied arm and hands of a person gesturing or event to spots of light tracing patterns on the television screen that represented the movements of a person's arms and hands. These demonstrations revealed that the dolphins interpreted television scenes as representations of the real world that they could act on in the same manner as they acted on the real world. The ease with which dolphins can recognize visual materials of this sort demonstrates that they are in fact highly visual animals as well as acoustic animals, making their way through their world by both sight and sound. This view runs counter to the older ideas of dolphins as primarily acoustic specialists, relying almost exclusively on passive listening and active echolocation to inspect their underwater world.

Herman, L. M., Morrel-Samuels, P. and Pack, A. A. (1990). Bottlenosed dolphin and human recognition of veridical and degraded video displays of an artificial gestural language. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 119, 215-230.

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