Ali N. Elhajj’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) Comprehend the Referential Character of the Human Pointing Gesture
  • Article
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December 1999

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3 Reads

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70 Citations

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Ali N. Elhajj

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The authors tested a dolphin's (Tursiops truncatus) understanding of human manual pointing gestures to 3 distal objects located to the left of, to the right of, or behind the dolphin. The human referred to an object through a direct point (Pd), a cross-body point (Px), or a familiar symbolic gesture (S). In Experiment 1, the dolphin responded correctly to 80% of Pds toward laterally placed objects but to only 40% of Pds to the object behind. Responding to objects behind improved to 88% in Experiment 2 after exaggerated pointing was briefly instituted. Spontaneous comprehension of Pxs also was demonstrated. In Experiment 3, the human produced a sequence of 2 Pds, 2 Pxs, 2 Ss, or all 2-way combinations of these 3 to direct the dolphin to take the object referenced second to the object referenced first. Accuracy ranged from 68% to 77% correct (chance = 17%). These results established that the dolphin understood the referential character of the human manual pointing gesture.

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Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) comprehend the referential character of the human pointing gesture

December 1999

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366 Reads

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127 Citations

The authors tested a dolphin's (Tursiops truncatus) understanding of human manual pointing gestures to 3 distal objects located to the left of, to the right of, or behind the dolphin. The human referred to an object through a direct point (Pd), a cross-body point (Px), or a familiar symbolic gesture (S). In Experiment 1, the dolphin responded correctly to 80% of Pds toward laterally placed objects but to only 40% of Pds to the object behind. Responding to objects behind improved to 88% in Experiment 2 after exaggerated pointing was briefly instituted. Spontaneous comprehension of Pxs also was demonstrated. In Experiment 3, the human produced a sequence of 2 Pds, 2 Pxs, 2 Ss, or all 2-way combinations of these 3 to direct the dolphin to take the object referenced second to the object referenced first. Accuracy ranged from 68% to 77% correct (chance = 17%). These results established that the dolphin understood the referential character of the human manual pointing gesture.

Citations (2)


... Studying animals' grammatical and syntax abilities can help us to understand the gap between human linguistic rule-learning skills and those of non-humans (see for example [62,[101][102][103]). Recently, Sainburg and co-authors [64] analysed the sequential dynamics of songs from multiple songbird species and speech from multiple languages by modelling the information content of signals as a function of the sequential distance between vocal elements and revealed functionally equivalent dynamics governed by similar processes. The second approach, which is based on artificial intermediary languages ("language-training experiments"), uncovered significant "linguistic" and cognitive potential in some species, that contrasts limitations in understanding their natural communications [104][105][106]; see also reviews in [31,107,108]. The third approach applies ideas of information theory to studying animal communication. ...

Reference:

Information Theory Opens New Dimensions in Experimental Studies of Animal Behaviour and Communication
Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) Comprehend the Referential Character of the Human Pointing Gesture

... However, other studies have provided evidence of comprehension of context-independent specific referential cues in the visual domain, such as directional gestures. Elephants (Smet and Byrne, 2013), seals (Scheumann and Call, 2004), and dolphins (Herman et al., 1999) have been found to comprehend the referential nature of human pointing. Moreover, some species have demonstrated the ability not only to comprehend but also to produce such signals (Pika and Bugnyar, 2011;Vail, Manica and Bshary, 2013). ...

Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) comprehend the referential character of the human pointing gesture