A Whale and an Elephant speaking like humans and another pachyderm is painting!

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http://www.sott.net/article/253015-Elephant-speaks-Korean-out-loud:

Elephant speaks Korean out loud

A zoo elephant in South Korea, can speak Korean out loud, researchers say. The pachyderm is capable of saying "hello," "good," "no," "sit down" and "lie down" - all by using its trunk to do the work of lips in a process scientists don't fully understand.

The elephant likely does not understand the actual meaning of what he says, researchers said.

Past reports have suggested both African and Asian elephants were capable of vocal mimicry like parrots. African elephants have been known to imitate the sound of truck engines, and a male Asian elephant living in a Kazakhstan zoo was said to utter sounds resembling Russian and Kazakh, but that case was never investigated scientifically.

Scientists investigating an Asian elephant known as Koshik say the beast can imitate human speech, pronouncing words in Korean, and those who know the language can readily understand Koshik. He accomplished this in a very unusual way - using his trunk stuck inside his mouth. [Watch Koshik Speak Korean]



Elephants cannot use their lips to make sounds like humans do, since their upper lips are fused with their noses to form their trunks. Instead, Koshik somehow controls the sounds coming from him by moving his trunk inside his throat.

A special elephant

"We do not really know what Koshik is doing exactly," said researcher Angela Stoeger-Horwath, a bioacoustician at the University of Vienna.

Three other Asian elephants have been known to whistle by pressing their trunks against their mouths, but this is the first time any elephant was known to alter their sounds by sticking its trunk into its mouth.

"Where there's a will, there's a way. Koshik's drive to share vocalizations with his human companions was so strong that he invented a whole new way of making sounds to achieve it," Stoeger-Horwath told LiveScience.

Although elephants living under human care may be heavily exposed to speech from birth on, "we all know that they do not imitate speech on a regular basis. So what is special about Koshik?" Stoeger-Horwath said.

Koshik was the only elephant at the Everland Zoo in South Korea for about seven years from 1995 to 2002, when he was a juvenile from age 5 to 12. His trainers first noticed him imitating human speech in 2004.

"The decisive factor for speech imitation in Koshik may be that humans were the only social contact available during an important period of bonding and development," Stoeger-Horwath said.

"We suggest that Koshik started to adapt his vocalizations to his human companions to strengthen social affiliation, something that is also seen in other vocal-learning species - and in very special cases, also across species," Stoeger-Horwath said.

Elephant vocabulary

The researchers asked 16 native Korean speakers to write down what they heard when listening to playbacks of Koshik's sounds. The elephant's vocabulary apparently consists of five words - "annyong" ("hello"), "choah" ("good"), "aniya" ("no"), "anja" ("sit down") and "nuo" ("lie down") - although his ability to imitate their consonants often proved weak.

When scientists analyzed Koshik's sounds, they were clearly different from the usual calls of elephants and exactly copied the pitch, timbre and other details of human voices.

"This is remarkable considering the huge size, the long vocal tract, and other anatomical differences between an elephant and a human," Stoeger-Horwath said.

As far as the scientists can tell, Koshik does not actually understand exactly what he says.

"Koshik mainly seems to be using these vocalizations as a way of bonding with people, rather than for their meaning," Stoeger-Horwath said.

Still, researchers said Koshik's imitation skills may yield insights on the biology and evolution of complex vocal learning. This ability is key to human speech and music.

Further studies might also explore how elephants vocally communicate with each other.

"Elephants are highly social mammals living in groups of related and socially affiliated individuals," Stoeger-Horwath said. "Elephants use low-frequency vocalizations to keep contact even over great distances when they split up for a certain period of time. It is therefore important for elephants to identify members of their family based on vocalizations. One possibility that we suggest is that socially affiliated elephants might imitate each other to increase similarity of their vocalizations to facilitate vocal recognition."

The scientists detailed their findings online Nov. 1 in the journal Current Biology.

video of him speaking: http://www.livescience.com/24453-elephant-speaks-korean-video.html
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http://www.sott.net/article/252648-Male-beluga-whale-mimics-human-voice:

Male beluga whale mimics human voice

Move over, Moby Dick. Scientists have found a white whale capable of imitating human speech.

These findings, the first to show that whales can mimic the voices of humans, suggest that researchers might want to analyze other whales for similar abilities.

Beluga whales, also known as white whales, are known as "the canaries of the sea" because of how vocal they are. They are not the same kind of whale as the monstrous giant of the story Moby Dick, which was a white sperm whale - belugas are actually among the smallest species of whales.

Amazing Noc

In 1984, scientists at the National Marine Mammal Foundation in San Diego began noticing unusual noises emanating from where they kept the whales and dolphins. These resembled two people conversing in the distance, just beyond the range of the understanding of listeners.

Researchers traced these sounds back to one male white whale, Noc, when a diver surfaced from the whale enclosure to ask his colleagues an odd question: "Who told me to get out?" The investigators concluded sounds resembling "out" came from Noc.



There were plenty of opportunities for Noc to hear human speech. He had previously overheard people talking at the surface, and had also heard them using devices that allowed them to speak with divers underwater.

Anecdotal reports have surfaced in the past of whales sounding like humans. For instance, at Vancouver Aquarium, keepers suggested that a white whale about 15 years of age had uttered his name, "Lagosi."

In a more rigorous test to see if Noc could mimic humans, scientists rewarded him with snacks when he made those sounds, prompting him to do so enough times for them to capture recordings.

Analysis of Noc's sounds revealed a rhythm similar to human speech. They also displayed fundamental frequencies several octaves lower than typical whale sounds and far closer to that of the human voice.

"We were amazed - the voiceprint really reminded us of humanlike sounds and unlike normal whale sounds," researcher Sam Ridgway, neurobiologist, research veterinarian and president of the National Marine Mammal Foundation, told LiveScience. "We never heard anything like this before."

Whale puckers up

These sounds are even more surprising because whales typically produce sounds in a completely different way from people, using their nasal tracts and not the voice box or larynx as humans do. To make these humanlike sounds, Noc had to vary the air pressure in his nasal tract while adjusting liplike valves and over-inflating sacs under his blowhole.

"Such obvious effort suggests motivation for contact," Ridgway said.

Noc's speechlike sounds subsided after about four years, after he matured. Still, he remained quite vocal in other ways for the rest of his 30-year life. (Noc passed away five years ago.)

Ridgway cautioned that people "should not think that whales can communicate with us at a conversational level based on these results." Still, "that is an intriguing possibility for future research to determine what, if anything, could be achieved at a conversational level."

Beluga whales are often kept in captivity, and researchers may want to see if those whales can mimic human sounds as well. "Keepers in aquaria should remain alert to such behavior and see that such events are analyzed with good acoustic methods," Ridgway said.

The scientists detailed their findings in tomorrow's (Oct. 23) issue of the journal Current Biology.
video of the Beluga speaking: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=E19vQOiZ8z8
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=He7Ge7Sogrk&feature=related

ORIGINAL Elephant Painting

Watch this elephant paint a beautiful image of an elephant holding a flower. You'll be amazed at how her talent unfolds as she carefully completes each stroke. Her mahout talks to her throughout the process as his gentle touch gives her confidence. She focuses on her work and seems to enjoy the approval of the audience and, of course, the sugar cane and banana treats. All of her training has been reward based.

So touched by their horrific backgrounds and loving personalities, ExoticWorldGifts.com now supports, "Starving Elephant Artisans" by selling their paintings so they can continue to have a new life in Thailand. Own a print of the art for $15.

Some Thai elephant experts believe that the survival of the Asian elephant species will most likely depend on the good treatment of the elephants in well managed privately owned elephant camps. All of us would prefer that all of the elephants be free to be in the wild. For many reasons, that is not possible at this time.

You can learn more and purchase these unique paintings at _http://www.ExoticWorldGifts.com

amazing he can paint better then I do!
 
The elephant painting is... incredible. How come? Is he trained to do this day by day? What is going in is mind while painting? This is a big mystery. The idea is good, this ark of elephants will surely help them to survive. But how come an elephant can paint? Is he doing this automatically or does he create by himself? And yes, he is painting better than me, almost better than Picasso! :P

Thanks for sharing all this!
 
Painting horse

This one is brilliant too!

His pictures sell for $750 to $1500 US Dollars!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wazv4QUPCis

:D
 
Koko

Last one.

This is Koko the sign language speaking gorilla. What's amazing about her art work is that she names the pieces herself.

http://koko.org/world/art.html

;D
 
It is possible the painting elephant is not what it seems. Does the elephant think it is drawing an elephant, or is making a pattern it has been trained to make?

I read some YouTube comments for a similar video. Some comments showed an automatic outrage and assumption of gross cruelty for anything involving elephants and captivity.

I don't necessarily think all or any of these comments are true, some might be complete fabrications, but if some are true, it could illustrate the way the painting elephant is not what is seems.

"The elephants are brutally trained to steer their trunks in the direction that the trainers tug the ears. If no trainer holds the elephants' ears, the best you'll get is random splotches of paint." [My comment: The painting elephant videos do show elephants painting without their ears being held, but maybe that is after they have been trained to make a particular image.]

"So, have you even seen some of these paintings? They paint "happy new year" and "happy birthday" (in multiple languages), and renderings of the royal family, anything you want, if you pay. EVERY painting without a trainer holding the ear is random splotches. But, with a trainer holding the ear, you get words in any language and portraits."

"Teaching it to paint is achieved by issuing voice commands whilst stabbing the trunk with a sharp nail. If the poor 3 year old do not take the instructions easily a metal hook is sometimes driven into its bleeding head, literally forcing it to learn."

"my cousin went there, but to a different elephant..place... and they had several different ellies paint the same image in the same day"

These comments were from the following video: _http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cy9kKxJJpug

This video is quite amusing at 3 to 4 minutes, where it shows an art teacher introducing the painting elephant to works by Klimt and Van Gogh.

At 2 to 3 minutes on the video, the narrator makes the rather incomplete observation that what allows the elephant to paint is the 40,000 muscles in its trunk and the trunk's dexterity, comparable to an opposable thumb, rather than referring to any cognitive or aesthetic capabilities.
 
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