Birds
show
superior
listening
skills
Posted
July
2
From
the
University
of
Alberta
Being
called
a
bird-brain
might
not
be
so
bad,
after
all.
Canadian
researchers
have
shown
that
humans
just
aren't
cut
out
to
discern
certain
pitches
like
their
feathered
friends.
Testing
completed
on
humans,
rats,
and
three
different
species
of
birds
shows
that
the
birds--even
ones
that
have
been
raised
in
isolation--are
better
at
identifying,
classifying,
and
memorizing
absolute
pitches
than
both
humans
and
rats,
with
humans
performing
just
slightly
better
than
rats.
Absolute
pitch
is
the
ability
to
remember
a
note's
precise
pitch.
"It's
amazing
how
dissimilar
the
results
of
this
test
are
when
you
compare
humans
and
birds,"
said
Dr.
Chris
Sturdy,
a
psychology
professor
at
the
University
of
Alberta.
"Humans
and
rats
are
weak
by
any
standard,
and
they're
just
awful
when
you
compare
them
to
the
songbirds."
For
the
study,
humans
were
given
monetary
rewards
when
they
memorized
or
recognized
the
pitches
that
were
played
for
them,
while
the
birds
(zebra
finches,
white
throated
sparrows,
and
budgerigars)
and
rats
were
given
food
rewards.
Sturdy
said
humans
actually
perform
fairly
well
in
tests
of
relative
pitch,
which
refers
to
the
relationship
between
two
pitch
sounds
played
one
right
after
the
other,
allowing
the
listener
to
use
one
pitch
as
a
reference
for
the
other.
However,
when
humans
try
to
comprehend
absolute
pitch,
which
refers
to
pitches
played
alone
without
any
external
standard
to
contrast
them
with,
their
ability
is
"lackluster
at
best,"
he
said.
Sturdy
believes
that
it
is
too
early
in
the
ongoing
research
to
speculate
extensively
about
the
cause
of
the
striking
difference
between
the
absolute
pitch
processing
abilities
of
birds
and
mammals.
Whatever
the
cause,
Sturdy
thinks
it
cannot
be
special
to
humans
because
other
mammals
(rats)
are
no
better
at
judging
absolute
pitch
than
humans.
The
latest
findings
from
this
study,
which
are
published
this
month
in
the
research
journal
Behavioral
Processes,
take
the
researchers
to
the
middle
stages
of
an
ongoing
project
to
determine
if
all
birds
are
better
equipped
than
all
mammals
to
understand
absolute
pitch.
Absolute
pitch
testing
is
planned
on
more
mammals
and
bird
species.
The
goal
is
to
create
a
map
of
absolute
pitch
understanding
among
as
many
animals
as
possible.
"How
animals
understand
absolute
pitch
may
get
to
the
heart
of
the
origins
of
musical
perception,"
Sturdy
added.
"Once
we
can
determine
the
extent
of
the
differences
in
absolute
pitch
perception,
then
we
can
begin
to
understand
why
these
differences
exist
and
why
our
mammalian
brains
work
the
way
they
do."