2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11284-016-1339-x
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Semantic communication in birds: evidence from field research over the past two decades

Abstract: What do animal signals mean? This is a central question in studies on animal communication.Research into the semantics of animal signals began in 1980, with evidence that alarm calls of a non-human primate designated predators as external referents. These studies have challenged the historical assumption that such referential signaling is a unique feature of human language and produced a paradigm shift in animal communication research. Over the past two decades, an increasing number of field studies have revea… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(63 citation statements)
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References 118 publications
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“…Additionally, they displayed stronger responses to alarm calls than to song (control). These results are consistent with bird alarm calls encoding information on threats and that such information could be conveyed to conspecific individuals (Lind, Jöngren, Nilsson, Alm, & Strandmark, ; Suzuki, , , , ; Suzuki & Ueda, ). As great tits behave differently in response to these three categories of playback stimuli, we suggest that they distinguish between these calls and likely relate them to the different intruders eliciting the specific alarm call types.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…Additionally, they displayed stronger responses to alarm calls than to song (control). These results are consistent with bird alarm calls encoding information on threats and that such information could be conveyed to conspecific individuals (Lind, Jöngren, Nilsson, Alm, & Strandmark, ; Suzuki, , , , ; Suzuki & Ueda, ). As great tits behave differently in response to these three categories of playback stimuli, we suggest that they distinguish between these calls and likely relate them to the different intruders eliciting the specific alarm call types.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Birds usually make alarm calls when encountering danger, and alarm calls contain information regarding the type, body size, distance, and threat level of enemies (e.g., Courter & Ritchison, ; Griesser, ; Hollén & Manser, ; Lind et al., ; Strnad, Němec, Veselý, Sýkorová, & Fuchs, ; Suzuki, , , , ; Suzuki & Ueda, ; Templeton et al., ). Call types (Suzuki, ; Suzuki & Ueda, ; Templeton et al., ), note type combinations (Suzuki, ), calling rate (Wilson & Mennill, ), number of notes per call and lowest frequency of a call (Leavesley & Magrath, ), and compositional syntax of alarm calls (Suzuki et al., ) may be used to pass on corresponding alarm information.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By definition, functionally referential calls meet two criteria: (a) they refer to, and possibly convey information about, a specific external threat and (b) they elicit in receivers antipredator behaviors that can be repeated in isolation (Macedonia & Evans, 1993;Smith, 2017;Suzuki, 2016;Townsend & Manser, 2013). By definition, functionally referential calls meet two criteria: (a) they refer to, and possibly convey information about, a specific external threat and (b) they elicit in receivers antipredator behaviors that can be repeated in isolation (Macedonia & Evans, 1993;Smith, 2017;Suzuki, 2016;Townsend & Manser, 2013).…”
Section: Alarm and Defensementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some species have innate predator recognition, where individuals exhibit appropriate antipredator behaviors already during the first predator encounter in life (Curio 1993;Li 2002;Storm and Lima 2010). Innate predator recognition is especially beneficial when trial-and-error learning is fatal, in solitary species, or in social species where naive juveniles do not have the opportunity to learn from knowledgeable individuals (Li 2002;Hollén and Radford 2009;Suzuki 2016). In contrast, individuals in many social species learn to respond appropriately to predators from other individuals (Caro 2005;Hollén and Radford 2009) or modify existing templates depending on the response of knowledgeable individuals (Cheney and Seyfarth 1980).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%