Is Anyone Listening?: What Animals Are Saying to Each Other and to Us
Autor Denise L. Herzingen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 noi 2024
If you could pose one question to a dolphin, what would it be? And what might a dolphin ask you? For forty years, researcher and author Denise L. Herzing has investigated these and related questions of marine mammal communication. With the assistance of a friendly community of Atlantic spotted dolphins in the Bahamas, Herzing studies two-way communication between different dolphin species and between humans and dolphins using a variety of cutting-edge experiments. But the dolphins are not the only ones talking, and in this wide-ranging and accessible book, Herzing explores the astonishing realities of interspecies communication, a skill that humans currently lack.
Is Anyone Listening? connects research on dolphin communication to findings from Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Dian Fossey on mountain gorillas, Cynthia Moss on African elephants, and others driving today’s exploration of possible animal languages. Although humans have long attempted to crack animal communication codes, only now do we have the advanced machine-learning tools to help. As Herzing reveals, researchers are finding fascinating hints of language in nonhuman species, including linguistic structures, vowel equivalents, and complex repeated sequences. By looking at the many ways animals use and manipulate signals, we see that we’ve only just begun to appreciate the diversity of animal intelligence and the complicated and subtle aspects of animal communication.
Considering dolphins and other nonhuman animals as colleagues instead of research subjects, Herzing asks us to meet animals as both speakers and listeners, as mutually curious beings, and to listen to what they are saying.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226357492
ISBN-10: 022635749X
Pagini: 232
Ilustrații: 30 halftones
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 022635749X
Pagini: 232
Ilustrații: 30 halftones
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
As research director of the Wild Dolphin Project, Denise L. Herzing has completed forty years of a long-term study on the Atlantic spotted dolphins of the Bahamas. She is also affiliate assistant professor in biology at Florida Atlantic University, coeditor of Dolphin Communication and Cognition, and the author of Dolphin Diaries: My 25 Years with Spotted Dolphins in the Bahamas and The Wild Dolphin Project.
Cuprins
Preface
1. When Species Meet
2. Lessons from Other Animals
3. Eavesdropping on Dolphins
4. Talking Back
5. Yesterday’s Tools
6. Tomorrow’s Rosetta Stone
7. Every Species Has Its Ambassador
8. Big Claims Take Big Evidence
Acknowledgments
Species Glossary
Notes
Index
1. When Species Meet
2. Lessons from Other Animals
3. Eavesdropping on Dolphins
4. Talking Back
5. Yesterday’s Tools
6. Tomorrow’s Rosetta Stone
7. Every Species Has Its Ambassador
8. Big Claims Take Big Evidence
Acknowledgments
Species Glossary
Notes
Index
Recenzii
"Herzing tackles the broad topic of nonhuman animal communication in all its fascinating and challenging scope. . . . Drawing on her four decades of dolphin research, Herzing unravels the workings behind interspecies communication—the many ways it is achieved amongst social species, the actual mechanics related with the different senses uses to communicate, and developments in the way humans have studied the phenomenon through the ages. . . . [There is] intense curiosity inherent in this book, and the author's laudable intentions of considering animal individuality over the conception of animal societies as just a numerical concatenation. . . . This book is a passionate plea for such research to be prioritised and funded, but always undertaken with a conception of the animals as mutually curious colleagues rather than as research subjects."
"In this entrancing report, marine biologist Herzing details her work for the Wild Dolphin Project researching how the animals communicate with humans and one another. . . . The firsthand accounts of studying dolphins in the wild position Herzing as a kind of aquatic Jane Goodall, and her recollections are elevated by philosophical musings on how scientists should think about the minds of other animals ('We should be looking to develop species-specific definitions for "types" of intelligence, rather than resorting to human comparisons'). Animal lovers will be eager to dive in."
"Herzing does a fantastic job looking at communication among an array of nonhuman animals, and how quite a few of those nonhuman animals extend those techniques to humans, or try to. Virtually every chapter is eye-opening."
"Herzing’s latest book Is Anyone Listening? discusses the complex and at times controversial topic of how to understand animal communication. . . I appreciated the nuance with which Herzing engaged with this topic. She’s careful to avoid mapping human motivations to non-human animals but still aptly describes how dolphins have their own complex approach to communication, which at times may be recognizable to humans. . . This book provides a deep dive into the world of animal communication, making the topic accessible to anyone fascinated by both the similarities and differences in how other species pass important information to one another. Through reading this book I gained a wider perspective on how our human perception of intelligence shapes scientific research."
“Dr. Dolittle famously desired to talk to the animals. Herzing has a better idea: stop talking long enough to listen to what the animals themselves are saying. Herzing has spent more than forty years doing just that, mostly while underwater with free-living dolphins. It might surprise us to learn that animals sometimes lie and that some animals talk by changing colors. Listen to what Herzing has to say here. You’ll be amazed.”
“It's high time someone pulled together our current knowledge of interspecies communication, and no one is better placed to do that than Herzing.”
“By merging personal stories with scientific depictions, Herzing offers a compelling argument that captivates.”
“A detailed, fascinating survey of the ongoing pursuit to understand the linguistic dimensions of nonhuman animals, told through the lens of Herzing’s decades of studying a community of dolphins in their native habitat. Particularly interesting is Herzing’s chronicle of her imaginative and pioneering use of technology to attempt to understand the many facets of dolphin communication. Required reading for anyone interested in building a bridge between humans and nonhumans.”