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Communication & Social Cognition in Elephants & Animals | Mickey Pardo | 217

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Manage episode 473688006 series 2846067
Content provided by Nick Jikomes. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Nick Jikomes or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

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Short Summary: Do elephants and other animals have language-like abilities, such as the ability to use individual names to refer to themselves and others?

About the guest: Michael Pardo, PhD studies animal behavior at Cornell University, where he focused on animal communication and cognition. His work includes extensive field research with African elephants in Kenya.

Note: Podcast episodes are fully available to paid subscribers on the M&M Substack and everyone on YouTube. Partial versions are available elsewhere. Full transcript and other information on Substack.

Episode Summary: Michael Pardo, PhD talks about his research on animal communication, focusing on whether African savanna elephants use vocal "names" to address each other. They explore the broader context of vocal communication across species like dolphins, parrots, and marmosets, discussing how these systems compare to human language and what they reveal about its evolution. Dr. Pardo shares details of his fieldwork in Kenya, elephant social structures, and their behaviors like mourning the dead, while also touching on the challenges and joys of studying animals in their natural habitats.

Key Takeaways:

  • Elephants may use unique vocal rumbles to address specific individuals.
  • Dolphins use signature whistles as "calling cards," sometimes imitating others’ whistles to get their attention, hinting at a form of naming.
  • Elephant society features female-led family groups and dispersing males.
  • Elephants show intriguing behaviors like visiting carcasses and covering them with dirt, suggesting an awareness of death uncommon in most animals.
  • Human language evolution may have evolved gradually from simpler communication systems, as seen in various species, rather than emerging suddenly.
  • Studying less charismatic animals like chickens could uncover surprisingly complex communication, broadening our understanding of cognition in nature.

Related episode:

  • M&M #20: Language, Symbolic Cognition, Evolution, Origins of the Human Mind | Terrence Deacon

*Not medical advice.

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  • KetoCitra—Ketone body BHB + electrolytes formulated for kidney health. Use code MIND20 for 20% off any subscription (cancel anytime)
  • Lumen device to optimize your metabolism for weight loss or athletic performance. Code MIND for 10% off
  • SiPhox Health—Affordable at-home blood testing. Key health markers, visualized & explained. Code TRIKOMES for a 20% discount.

For all the ways you can support my efforts

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249 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 473688006 series 2846067
Content provided by Nick Jikomes. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Nick Jikomes or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Send us a text

Short Summary: Do elephants and other animals have language-like abilities, such as the ability to use individual names to refer to themselves and others?

About the guest: Michael Pardo, PhD studies animal behavior at Cornell University, where he focused on animal communication and cognition. His work includes extensive field research with African elephants in Kenya.

Note: Podcast episodes are fully available to paid subscribers on the M&M Substack and everyone on YouTube. Partial versions are available elsewhere. Full transcript and other information on Substack.

Episode Summary: Michael Pardo, PhD talks about his research on animal communication, focusing on whether African savanna elephants use vocal "names" to address each other. They explore the broader context of vocal communication across species like dolphins, parrots, and marmosets, discussing how these systems compare to human language and what they reveal about its evolution. Dr. Pardo shares details of his fieldwork in Kenya, elephant social structures, and their behaviors like mourning the dead, while also touching on the challenges and joys of studying animals in their natural habitats.

Key Takeaways:

  • Elephants may use unique vocal rumbles to address specific individuals.
  • Dolphins use signature whistles as "calling cards," sometimes imitating others’ whistles to get their attention, hinting at a form of naming.
  • Elephant society features female-led family groups and dispersing males.
  • Elephants show intriguing behaviors like visiting carcasses and covering them with dirt, suggesting an awareness of death uncommon in most animals.
  • Human language evolution may have evolved gradually from simpler communication systems, as seen in various species, rather than emerging suddenly.
  • Studying less charismatic animals like chickens could uncover surprisingly complex communication, broadening our understanding of cognition in nature.

Related episode:

  • M&M #20: Language, Symbolic Cognition, Evolution, Origins of the Human Mind | Terrence Deacon

*Not medical advice.

Support the show

Affiliates:

  • Seed Oil Scout: Find restaurants with seed oil-free options, scan food products to see what they’re hiding, with this easy-to-use mobile app.
  • AquaTru: Reverse osmosis water filters. Remove metals, microbes, endocrine disruptors and toxins from drinking water. $100 off AquaTru filters through link.
  • KetoCitra—Ketone body BHB + electrolytes formulated for kidney health. Use code MIND20 for 20% off any subscription (cancel anytime)
  • Lumen device to optimize your metabolism for weight loss or athletic performance. Code MIND for 10% off
  • SiPhox Health—Affordable at-home blood testing. Key health markers, visualized & explained. Code TRIKOMES for a 20% discount.

For all the ways you can support my efforts

  continue reading

249 episodes

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