..In Perfect Harmony...."
Dolphins sing 'Batman' theme
Scientists
 have taught dolphins to combine both rhythm and vocalisations to 
produce music, resulting in an extremely high-pitched, short version of 
the Batman theme song.
The findings, outlined in two studies, are
 the first time that nonhuman mammals have demonstrated they can 
recognise rhythms and reproduce them vocally.
"Humans are 
sensitive to rhythms embedded in sequences of sounds, but we typically 
consider this skill to be part of processing for language and music, 
cognitive domains that we consider to be uniquely human," says Professor
 Heidi Harley, lead author of both studies.
"Clearly, aspects of those domains are available to other species."
The
 studies will be presented at the joint meeting of the Acoustical 
Society of America and NOISE-CON 2005, which runs (ran from)  from 17 to 21 October 
in Minneapolis.
Learning to sing
Harley, who is 
associate professor of social sciences at the New College of Florida in 
Sarasota, says that both studies tested dolphins at Disney's Epcot 
Center in Florida.
The researchers first had an adult male 
bottlenose dolphin position itself in front of an underwater sound 
projector, called a hydrophone, that produced six different 14 kiloherz,
 4 second rhythms.
The dolphin was rewarded for performing a 
certain behaviour to each rhythm. For example, when rhythm 1 played, it 
waved its pectoral fin and when rhythm 2 played, it tossed a ball.
The
 various rhythms were played at different frequencies and tempos to 
ensure the dolphin was recognising rhythms instead of just frequencies 
or sound durations.
Another adult male was trained to produce 
similar rhythms using a pneumatic switch, essentially a small, 
air-filled ball connected to a computer that then generated sounds 
whenever the dolphin pressed the switch.
"The dolphin was reinforced for producing a specific rhythm to a specific object," says Harley.
"For
 example, when we presented him with a Batman doll, he received a fish 
for producing a specific rhythm, in this case, a short sound and then a 
long one."
"If you recall the original Batman TV series musical 
intro you'll probably remember the way they sang 'Bat-maaaaaaaan'," she 
adds.
The dolphin spontaneously vocalised to the rhythms, so the 
researchers started to reward the male with fish whenever it matched its
 'singing' to the rhythms.
By the end of the studies, the 
sientists could show an object, such as the Batman doll, which 
represented a certain rhythm-vocalisation combo to the dolphin, and it 
would create the correct sounds both vocally and using the switch.
Batmaaaaaaan
Gordon
 Bauer, associate professor of psychology at the New College of Florida 
who did not work on the studies, says, "This is the first report, to my 
knowledge, of a nonhuman mammal's ability to discriminate rhythmic 
patterns."
But Bauer doubts that dolphins realise they are producing what people consider 'music'.
"I
 think music is a human construct," he says. "I doubt that it has 
pertinence to animals, although the elements of music, such as pitch, 
time, timbre, rhythm, etc, may be incorporated into animal 
communication."
Harley agrees, and hopes the everyday vocalisations of dolphins will be analysed in terms of their rhythmic content.
In
 the near future, she and her team are planning to test the dolphins on 
their ability to recognise recordings of their own rhythms by having 
them associate their own sound creations with identifying objects 
similar to the Batman doll.
*Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News
 
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