Was geht euch gerade durch den Kopf?
09.08.2020 um 10:22KFB schrieb:Dreifach gefalteter GottDreifaltiger :klugmaul:
VoodooMissy schrieb:wird kühler als gestern. Nur 34° Grad statt 37° :shot:Dann lieber einen Schal umlegen
KFB schrieb:Dreifach gefalteter GottDreifaltiger :klugmaul:
VoodooMissy schrieb:wird kühler als gestern. Nur 34° Grad statt 37° :shot:Dann lieber einen Schal umlegen
Brian: Hört zu. Ihr versteht das alles falsch. Es ist wirklich nicht nötig, dass ihr mir folgt. Es ist völlig unnötig, einem Menschen zu folgen, den ihr nicht mal kennt. Ihr müsst nur an euch selbst denken. Ihr seid doch alle Individuen.
Menge: Ja! Wir sind alle Individuen!
Brian: Und ihr seid alle völlig verschieden!
Menge: Ja! Wir sind alle völlig verschieden!
Dennis: Ich nicht!
Menge: Pscht!!
Quelle:
To see if the cockatoo was actually in the groove and not simply trained, Patel visited Snowball at his Indiana home. He put the bird through the paces of a controlled experiment, speeding up and slowing down the music's tempo. Snowball wasn't fazed. "He adjusted the tempo of his dancing to stay synchronized to the beat," says Patel. To do so, he "must be monitoring the sounds" and changing his bobbing and kicking as the musical beat speeds up or slows down. The same neural abilities are required to imitate sounds, explains Patel, whose team reports its findings online today in Current Biology.[...]Quelle: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2009/04/bird-can-boogie
That spurred the authors to look for other musically talented animals. They analyzed more than 1000 YouTube videos of dancing animals, including dogs, cats, chimpanzees, elephants, and birds, to see which individuals were actually moving synchronously with the beat and responding correctly if the beat changed. Only vocal mimics--primarily parrots, as well as one Asian elephant--could do so, the team discovered. (One elephant has been shown to imitate truck noises (ScienceNOW, 23 March 2005), a sign of vocal mimicry.) "It does seem that vocal mimicry and keeping a beat rely on the same neural mechanisms," says Schachner.