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To cast a wider net in the animal kingdom, Schachner and colleagues searched YouTube for videos of dancing animals. Out of about 1,000 such videos, they found 49 that appeared worthy of a detailed analysis; 33 videos showed convincing evidence of animals following a musical beat. Those animals were 14 species of parrot and one species of elephant
-- all known to be able to mimic sounds they hear, a result that supports Patel's theory. Schachner, who pointed out that elephants are often trained performers and that little is known about the elephant videos, said it will take further work before she's convinced that elephants really move to a beat on their own. When researchers contacted the owners of some parrots in the videos, they were told that the birds' response to music had been a surprise, indicating a natural ability. Still, not every parrot will dance to music, and so the brain circuitry for so-called "vocal mimicry" apparently isn't enough by itself to make an animal boogie, Schachner said.
In a Current Biology commentary, W. Tecumseh Fitch of the University of St. Andrews in Scotland said the new work topples the claim that only people can move to a musical beat. It would make sense to study dolphins for that ability, and it's too early to rule out apes, he said. ___ On the Net: Video of Snowball: http://sn.im/h2j6m Snowball's homepage: Sample of bird videos: http://sn.im/h2jca Current Biology:
http://www.birdloversonly.org/blsnowball.shtml
http://www.cell.com/current-biology/
[Associated
Press;
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