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All animals communicate.
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Crabs wave their claws at each other
to signal that they're healthy
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and ready to mate.
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Cuttlefish use pigmented skin cells
called chromatophores
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to create patterns on their skin
that act as camouflage
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or warnings to rivals.
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Honeybees perform complex dances
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to let other bees know the location
and quality of a food source.
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All of these animals have impressive
communication systems,
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but do they have language?
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To answer that question,
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we can look at four specific qualities
that are often associated with language:
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discreteness,
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grammar,
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productivity,
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and displacement.
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Discreteness means that there is a set
of individual units,
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such as sounds or words,
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that can be combined
to communicate new ideas,
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like a set of refrigerator poetry magnets
you can rearrange
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to create different phrases.
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Grammar provides a system of rules
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that tells you how to combine
those individual units.
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Productivity is the ability
to use language
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to create an infinite number of messages.
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And displacement is the ability
to talk about things
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that aren't right in front of you,
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such as past, future, or fictional events.
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So, does animal communication exhibit
any of these qualities?
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For crabs and cuttlefish,
the answer is no.
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They don't combine their signals
in creative ways.
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Those signals also don't have to be
in a grammatical order,
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and they only communicate
current conditions,
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like, "I am healthy,"
or "I am poisonous."
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But some animals actually do display
some of these properties.
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Bees use the moves, angle, duration,
and intensity of their waggle dance
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to describe the location and richness
of a food source.
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That source is outside the hive,
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so they exhibit the property
of displacement.
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They share that language trait
with prairie dogs,
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which live in towns of thousands,
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and are hunted by coyotes, hawks,
badgers, snakes, and humans.
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Their alarms calls indicate
the predator's size, shape, speed,
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and, even for human predators,
what the person is wearing
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and if he's carrying a gun.
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Great apes, like chimps and gorillas,
are great communicators, too.
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Some have even learned
a modified sign language.
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A chimpanzee named Washoe
demonstrated discreteness
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by combining multiple signs
into original phrases,
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like, "Please open. Hurry."
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Coco, a female gorilla who understands
more than 1000 signs,
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and around 2000 words of spoken English
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referred to a beloved kitten
that had died.
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In doing so, she displayed displacement,
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though it's worth noting that the apes
in both of these examples
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were using a human communication system,
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not one that appeared
naturally in the wild.
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There are many other examples
of sophisticated animal communication,
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such as in dolphins,
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which use whistles to identify age,
location, names, and gender.
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They can also understand some grammar
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in a gestural language researchers use
to communicate with them.
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However, grammar is not seen
in the dolphin's natural communication.
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While these communication systems
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may have some of the qualities
of language we've identified,
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none display all four.
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Even Washoe and Coco's impressive
abilities are still outpaced
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by the language skills
of most three-year-old humans.
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And animals' topics of conversation
are usually limited.
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Bees talk about food,
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prairie dogs talk about predators,
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and crabs talk about themselves.
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Human language stands alone
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due to the powerful combination
of grammar and productivity,
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on top of discreteness and displacement.
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The human brain can take
a finite number of elements
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and create an infinite number of messages.
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We can craft and understand
complex sentences,
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as well as words that have never
been spoken before.
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We can use language to communicate
about an endless range of subjects,
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talk about imaginary things,
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and even lie.
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Research continues to reveal more
and more about animal communication.
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It may turn out that human language
and animal communication
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aren't entirely different
but exist on a continuum.
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After all, we are all animals.