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BEIJING, Jan. 10 -- Rats can use the rhythm of human language to tell the
difference between Dutch and Japanese, researchers in Spain reported Sunday.
Their study suggests that animals, especially mammals, evolved some of the skills underlying the use and development of language long before language
itself ever evolved, the researchers said.
It is the first time an animal other than a human or monkey has been shown
to have this skill.
"These findings have remarkable parallels with data from human adults,
human newborns, and cotton-top tamarins," the researchers wrote in their report,
published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes,
which is published by the American Psychological Association.
For their study neuroscientists Juan Toro and colleagues at Barcelona's
Scientific Park tested 64 adult male rats.
They used Dutch and Japanese because these languages were used in earlier,
similar tests, and because they are very different from one another in use of
words, rhythm and structure.
The rats were trained to respond to either Dutch or Japanese using food as
a reward.
Then they were separated into four groups -- one that heard each language
spoken by a native, one that heard synthesized speech, one that heard sentences
read in either language by different speakers and a fourth that heard the
languages played backwards.
Rats rewarded for responding to Japanese did not respond to Dutch and rats
trained to recognize Dutch did not respond the spoken Japanese.
The rats could not tell apart Japanese or Dutch played backwards.
"Results showed that rats could discriminate natural sentences when uttered
by a single speaker and not when uttered by different ones, nor could they
distinguish the languages when spoken by different people," the researchers
wrote.
Human newborns have the same problem, although tamarins can easily tell
languages apart even when spoken by different people, the researchers said.
"It was striking to find that rats can track certain information that seems
to be so important in language development in humans," Toro said in a statement.
The study shows "which abilities that humans use for language are shared
with other animals, and which are uniquely human. It also suggests what sort of
evolutionary precursors language might have," he added.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies) |