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201202Nov17:31

Ele­phant in zoo speaks Korean

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 02 Novem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 02 Novem­ber 2012
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Elephant KoshikAn Asian ele­phant named Koshik in Ever­land Zoo, South Korea, can imi­tate human speech, speak­ing words in Korean that can be read­ily under­stood by those who know the lan­guage. The ele­phant accom­plishes this in a very unusual way: he vocalises with his trunk in his mouth. An inter­na­tional team led by researchers at the Uni­ver­sity of Vienna — includ­ing cog­ni­tive biol­o­gists Angela Stoeger and Tecum­seh Fitch — pub­lished their find­ings in the jour­nal Cur­rent Biol­ogy.

We found a high agree­ment con­cern­ing the over­all mean­ing, and some­times even the Korean spelling of Koshik’s imitations
Angela Stoeger, cog­ni­tive biol­o­gist, Uni­ver­sity of Vienna »

The elephant’s vocab­u­lary con­sists of five words: “anny­ong” (“hello”), “anja” (“sit down”), “aniya” (“no”), “nuo” (“lie down”), and “choah” (“good”). Ulti­mately, Koshik’s lan­guage skills may pro­vide impor­tant insights into the biol­ogy and evo­lu­tion of com­plex vocal learn­ing, an abil­ity that is crit­i­cal for human speech and music, the researchers say.

“Human speech basi­cally has two impor­tant aspects, pitch and tim­bre,” says Angela Stoeger of the Depart­ment of Cog­ni­tive Biol­ogy, Uni­ver­sity of Vienna. “Intrigu­ingly, the ele­phant Koshik is capa­ble of match­ing both pitch and tim­bre pat­terns: he accu­rately imi­tates human for­mants as well as the voice pitch of his train­ers. This is remark­able con­sid­er­ing the huge lar­ynx size, the long vocal tract, and other anatom­i­cal dif­fer­ences between an ele­phant and a human.” For one thing, Stoeger says, ele­phants have a trunk instead of lips. While their large lar­ynx can pro­duce very low-​pitched sounds, Koshik’s speech mim­icry pre­cisely copies the pitch and other char­ac­ter­is­tics of his human train­ers’ voices. A struc­tural analy­sis of Koshik’s speech showed not just clear sim­i­lar­i­ties to human voices, but also clear dif­fer­ences from the usual calls of ele­phants.

There have been some ear­lier reports of vocal mim­icry in both African and Asian ele­phants. African ele­phants have been known to imi­tate the sound of truck engines, and a male Asian ele­phant liv­ing in a zoo in Kaza­khstan was said to pro­duce utter­ances in both Russ­ian and Kazakh, but that case was never sci­en­tif­i­cally inves­ti­gated.

An exam­ple of what Koshik is capa­ble of can be seen in this video on the web­site of Uni­ver­sity of Vienna.

In the case of Koshik, Angela Stoeger, Daniel Mietchen, Tecum­seh Fitch, and their col­leagues con­firmed that Koshik was imi­tat­ing Korean words in sev­eral ways. First, they asked native Korean speak­ers to write down what they heard when lis­ten­ing to play­backs of the elephant’s sounds.
“We found a high agree­ment con­cern­ing the over­all mean­ing, and some­times even the Korean spelling of Koshik’s imi­ta­tions,” Stoeger says. But as far as the sci­en­tists can tell, Koshik doesn’t actu­ally use these words mean­ing­fully.

It’s not com­pletely clear why Koshik adopted his unusual vocal behav­ior, but the researchers sug­gest that it might go back to his days as a juve­nile. Koshik was the only ele­phant liv­ing at the Ever­land Zoo in South Korea for about five years, dur­ing an impor­tant period for ele­phant bond­ing and devel­op­ment. Dur­ing this time, humans were his only social con­tacts. “We sug­gest that Koshik started to adapt his vocal­i­sa­tions to his human com­pan­ions to strengthen his social affil­i­a­tion with them, some­thing that is also seen in other vocal-​learning species — and in very spe­cial cases, even across species,” Stoeger says.


(Source: Uni­ver­sity of Vienna press release, 01.11.2012)

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