IntroductionHumans differ from animals in their use of language is a subject of much discussion Researches have taught apes, dolphins, and parrots various systems of human-like communication
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LANGUAGE IN NON-HUMAN SPECIES. BIRDS
Birdsong appears to have
much in common with human language. Birds have an
innate system of calls, but their songs mostly involve learning and develop by later experience (Aitchison 1996:7-9). Young birds have a period of sub-song before their songs are fully developed, and they also appear to have a sensitive period in which they learn their songs.
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The African grey parrot ALEX, studied by Irene
Pepperberg, imitates human utterances and seems to relate these
sounds with meanings, but his ability to imitate sounds similar to those produced by humans is quite different from the acquisition of syntax (Fromkin and Rodman 1998:23-24).
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Whales and Dolphins Studies of communication among whales are
limited in scope, but their sounds seem to be
motivated by a need to communicate.
Researchers have tried to teach dolphins forms of language, e.g. acoustic computer-generated whistles in the water, but so far investigation has not revealed whether they use their calls for any kind of human-like conversation
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Bottle-nosed dolphins have an impressive auditory memory system,
capacities for rule-governed behaviour, and for imitative learning. Investigations
of their whistles have revealed different patterns, which have been identified by the pitch contour, e.g. downward glide = distress, upward glide = search, rise- fall-rise-fall = excitement or irritation (Bonner 1980:128-129). Also, dolphins use vocalizations for echo-location (navigation, food location, object identification, etc.).
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APES Many researchers have tried to teach apes to
communicate with humans and even with one another. chimpanzees
were not physically capable of producing articulated speech (Wardhaugh 1993:43-45) although they did understand many spoken words. Some researchers (R.A. and B.T. Gardner and H.S. Terrace) taught the apes American Sign Language (ASL). None of the trained animals seem to assimilate grammatical morphemes. The best translation of a chimpanzee phrase corresponding to 'Give me the orange' is 'give Washoe/me orange', where Washoe/me is the hand pointing back at the signer.
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Among themselves primates use a wide variety of
communication (e.g. olfactory, auditory, tactile, visual, and vocal). Apparently,
the brains of chimpanzees do not lack the structures necessary for language development, but they may lack the structures responsible for syntax. The language of trained apes represents an early stage of language development, a protolanguage similar to that of very young children and speakers of pidgins. Conclusively, we may regard human language as a further development of communication systems also found among other species rather than being uniquely human.