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How animals laugh

Posted: Thursday, June 04, 2009 12:01 PM by Alan Boyle


Miriam Wessels / Univ. of Veterinary Medicine
Click for video: An orangutan named Naru vocalizes during a tickling session.
Click on the image to watch what happens when a gorilla is tickled in captivity.

How do you graph the evolution of a laugh? Researchers tickled babies and six different kinds of apes, quantified their giggles, and found that the patterns fit a classic evolutionary tree.

Those patterns hint at the ancient origins of human hilarity and suggest that other social species - including apes, dogs and rats - really, truly laugh as well.

"What we can say is that laughter goes back at least 10 to 16 million years," said University of Portsmouth primatologist Marina Davila Ross, one of the researchers behind the study published online today in the journal Current Biology. "It could go farther than that."

A prominent researcher in the specialized field of animal laughter, Jaak Panksepp of Washington State University, said it definitely goes farther back than that. "I personally think that a credible laughter concept can, and already has been, extended to mammalian species as lowly as the rat," he told me in an e-mail.

For years, Panksepp and his colleagues have been documenting the high-pitched vocalizations that rats make when they're tickled by human handlers - and they insist that such vocalizations reflect "laughter and social joy." But some skeptics have said it's too much of a stretch to classify those sounds as true laughter.

The research conducted by Davila Ross and her colleagues - Georgia State University's Michael Owren and Elke Zimmermann of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover, Germany - appears to support the case for animal laughter. The scientists charted a spectrum of tickle-induced vocalizations from three human infants and four species of great apes in captivity, plus the less closely related siamang ape.

Eleven auditory variables were measured for the 25 experimental subjects - variables such as the length of the vocalization, the in-and-out breathing patterns and the vibrations of the vocal cords. All those numbers were fed into a software program that looked for relationships between the data points. Then the computer constructed a phylogenetic tree (that is, the "family tree") that fit the data best.

The resulting tree turned out to reflect the widely accepted evolutionary relationships between the species. The siamang was way out on its own branch. Chimpanzees and bonobos were closely related to each other, and to humans. Gorillas branched out a bit lower on the tree, and orangutans were lower still.

"It's an interesting pattern," Davila Ross said. The human babies had a distinctive pattern of laughter: a haa-haa-haa, with regular voicing, on the exhale only. But the researchers could see the roots of that pattern in the chimp vocalizations: typically, a fast hee-uh-hee-uh-hee, using an in-and-out airflow.

Listen to the tickle-induced laughter from five of the species that were studied, as captured in audio clips from the University of Portsmouth:

The researchers were surprised to find that some of the apes could extend their exhalation to as long as 10 seconds during laughter. "That's something that was thought to be present only in humans," Davila Ross said. "It's certainly an important part of speech - that we can produce a continuous vocal flow without having to stop, inhale, and say a few more words again."

In their Current Biology paper, the researchers say "one can conclude that it is appropriate to consider 'laughter' to be a cross-species phenomenon, and that it is therefore not anthropomorphic to use this term for tickling-induced vocalizations produced by the great apes."

Laughter around the animal world
Panksepp said the paper "provides a minimalist, highly conservative interpretation of the exciting findings." He's been focusing on rats, but other research suggests that dogs make a particular kind of pant that could be considered laughter. The "dog-laugh" accompanies play behavior, and when other dogs hear the sound, it appears to reduce stress (like a good joke among humans).

One of Panksepp's research colleagues, Northwestern University's Jeffrey Burgdorf, said rat laughs seem to have a similar effect ... on rats, that is. "These animals like to hear them," he told me. "They press a bar to hear these vocalizations. ... Every time they vocalize, it's rewarding to them."

Burgdorf sees the evidence of that in the rats' neurochemical response as well. Laughing, or even hearing laughter, leads to the release of dopamine and opiates that make the brain feel good.

The more socially oriented a species is, the more likely it is to exhibit laughter (or, more technically, vocalizations associated with tickling or play). Rats laugh, but not mice. "Mice are solitary creatures," Burgdorf said.

OK, so what about cats? Could purring be considered laughter? "My gut says that it is, but you can't show it empirically," Burgdorf said. If researchers find that a cat's purr is associated with the brain's feel-good chemicals, that might support the case for feline laughter. But really, the bottom line is that there's a wide spectrum of vocalizations linked to animal pleasures.

"Invertebrates make vocalizations, but they don't have neuroanatomical homology to humans," said Burgdorf, sounding thoroughly like the neuroscientist he is. Translation: Just because a bee buzzes, that doesn't mean it's laughing at you.

Evolution of laughter
The latest research doesn't speculate on what drove the evolution of laughter. "It could be that there are social factors that have had an impact on evolution," Davila Ross said. "There could be side effects of the evolution of vocalization and speech."

The apes were recorded during tickling sessions at seven European zoos, and Davila Ross acknowledged that laughter in the wild could be different from laughter in captivity. "Even if you compare one zoo group with another zoo group, there are differences," she said. But the researchers tried to minimize the potential for human influence by tickling infants and juveniles rather than adult apes.

Vocalizations associated with pleasure could serve as positive signals to other members of the species during social interactions. "It probably came from mating vocalizations, which are examples of positive social interactions," Burgdorf said.

Burgdorf said he's interested in laughter not so much to find out how it evolved, but to find out how it can heal. If there's a link between particular types of vocalizations and the neurochemistry of feeling good, then animal studies could lead to better mood-lightening medicines.

Studying animal laughter certainly lightened the mood of Davila Ross and her colleagues: "When watching the apes play with the caretakers, it was contagious," she said.

For more mood lighteners, check out our roundups of zoo babies and oddball animals, plus this video of a giggling gorilla.

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For a serious theory of the evolutionary origin of laughter, its relation to play, as well as the relation of tickling to play, as well as to jokes and riddles, you might want to read my book; The Evolutionary Origin of Human Behavior. The web,with some extracts is www.childrenofplay.com .
This is funny enough tomake the cat laugh,.....ar ar
Someone should give RSM an Elmo
Nice article. Need some light heartedness in all this doom and gloom. My dog is very smart and I know she knows what I am saying to her.
This is odd in that the researchers use tickling as a way to determine when an animal laughs.

If they are trying to show the evolutionary links of the apes to us, it might be better if they used an action which is not also used as a form of torture
I discovered the play-laugh when my rescued Aussie/Yellow Lab mix was first adopted. She was very nervous all the time. When I started laughing, she stopped fretting and pacing, and over time she would begin playing. Since then of course she's well adjusted and a very intelligent and emotional creature.

The play-laugh has also been useful as a firefighter, as many dogs freak out when their human is ill and we need to gain access. A little play posturing almost always works.

I think this kind of research is fascinating and very validating to my own experiences.
If you talk to anyone who works with animals closely they will tell you they are more like us than one thinks. They have their own personalities and quirks. Finding things funny doesn't take a highly evolved brain.
My kitten giggles whenever she's hyper and in a playing mood... it's an odd noise, but VERY cute! Gets me laughing each time!
Regarding barking at the dog, we did something similar with a person who lived on my floor freshman year whose name was (and is) Doug--no kidding.  Doug had no hearing in one ear, so he couldn't easily identify where sounds were coming from.  We used to call out to him in the cafeteria when we were in line and watch him spin around to figure out where the sound came from.  We thought it was funny, too.  He's now a doctor, so we didn't scar him for life.
If it moves, it has a nervous system, it can feel pain, it can feel pleasure. There has to be an outward, physical demonstration to the stimulus. I found the article interesting. My cat purrs when I rub it in the right spot. My dogs; if you rub, scratch or otherwise tickle their rib cage-they respond with the clonic leg jerking. They don't laugh-but they do demonstrate that they like it.
don't know if cats laugh, but they certainly smile, and show amusement.
I know for a fact as a bird owner myself that birds can laugh as many posters pointed out. However, let's not just jump to conclusion they are always "laughing".

I know my birds, a Quaker and a Conure, will just make the sound of a laugh as part of their repertoire. I got the impression that the researchers were studying laughter as an emotional response and not just a sound. Now before all the bird owners jump on me I do know my birds (and all parrots) have a wacky sense of humor and will laugh and display "laughter". Everything from the "look at me on the curtain rod, I'm destroying your expensive curtains evil laugh" to the silly playfull laugh when you play peek-a-boo with them or some other game. I'm just saying that they also just make the laugh sound just for the heck of it and they repeat sounds they hear and I don't think the researchers were studying the sound of laughter. I just wanted to add that before someone who thinks parrots just mimic sounds states that they just mimic sounds. Yes they do sometimes mimic sounds sometimes, actually they mimic sounds all the time. Just most parrots learn to mimic sounds and to apply appropriate meanings to them and use them with intelligence.

For instance a very simple example - (for non bird owners) my bird, who's name is Frodo will say "Step up frodo" sometimes when I am in the room. I will walk over to him and give him the command "step up Frodo" and he steps up to my hand. I believe it's his way of asking me to pick him up. I know he does not know literally what the words mean but maybe to him "step up Frodo" is a concept in his mind of us sharing close time together. Now before you say he always does this on command no he does not always always step up, most of the time he will but sometimes he can be a stinker. sorry to digress off topic.
I hardly read any of the article. I figure a smart enough animal will know when you're not trying to hurt it. So if you touch it in a bothersome way, it won't bite you, but you'll trigger it's reflexes and change it's breathing pattern so it will make different sounds than usual. Big freakin deal.
RSM... and I would bet you are one of these good christian who think animals are so inferior. I would not be surprise if dogs and other animals laugh because I am sure animals have feelings. Many of them love their mate, look at birds who many will mate for life like swallows do, look at dogs who will get stressed when their owners leave.
bethann, bayshore, ny (6/5, 1200)wrote, "... it might be better if they used an action which is not also used as a form of torture."
Or maybe, for the sake of comparative responses, they should waterboard one to see if he talks.  Oh --- he'll talk.
All I have to say is "LOLcats" hahaha
How do you get from who pays, RSM comment, to religion, elissabeth schneider comment?
I'm one of those good Christians who think animals are inferior.  Until one of them tells me differently I don't forsee changing my mind.  What animals make art?  Do mountain lions ever sit and wonder at the beauty of their home?  Lot's of animals use noise to communicate, do any use instruments to make music?  I can set a six year old human loose in the forrest and they can set up a simple percussion section.  Except for in "The Jungle Book" do any apes do so?
Bad news, Christian fanatics: we DID evolve from an apelike species.  Get over your distaste, although I cannot figure out why an ancestral animal upsets people.  Animals have a more pure spirit than humans!  Animals don't have hidden agendas, they don't make treaties or agreements and then renege on them.  
Tim Rommes;
Elephants have been painting. So yes they do make art.
Mountain lions may sit and wonder at the beauty of their home. How would you know?
Lots of animals make music to entertain. Birds, for example, make music all the time.

What beauty is there in percussion? What beauty is there in destructive and toxic chemicals dumped in good land? Do you see animals squabbling over the difference of a flamingo pink napkin or a pretty-in-pink one? Honestly, get over yourself. Humans have been inspired by other animals to MAKE art, music, and other pursuits. It's the very nature that allows us to be human, and not the other way around.
Zerina,
Reread.  Not just a cursory reread, use critical reading skills.
I wasn't aware of elephants painting.  I wonder are they elephants trained to paint as a trick?  And is what you're talking about artistic painting or do they just slop paint around to get a marshmallow or avoid the whip?  Do they do landscapes?  Paint a scene they remember from calfhood?  Impressionist?  Expressionist?  I'll bet abstract.
Okay, I'm back.  I went out exploring, that's Internet Exploring, and found a few sites on painting elephants.  Some were the trick, stand on your two back feet, put your foot on the trainers head without squashing it, copy this.  The others were free form.  Showed some style.  Varying degrees of good use of color.  A few had some aesthetic value.  The same can be said if you give a 1 year old finger paint.  I think 1 year olds lack the capacity to be artists.  It looked like the elephants slopped some color they liked and made shapes they liked.  Nothing that indicated planning or the display of emotion.  But, I imagine, if a bird crapped on your windshield and it looked nice you *could* expand your definition of artist so that the bird is one.  Rant off.
And there's lots of beauty in percussion.  Granted, I have heard some terrible percussion, also.  
I have seen my cat and dog play and enjoy themselves but they seem to spend most of the time sleeping. I think laughing requires a higher intellect which humans sometimes seem to have but our pets don't. They don't have the vocal cords to laugh like us so we probably will never know for sure if they have a concept for laughter. I don't think I would care to tickle a gorilla just to see what the resulting response was.
I currently house and feed a mutt, a cat and a Rottweiler.  All have their own version of laughter...the mutt smiles at me when I feed him or give him a bone to chew, the cat purrs laughingly when he drags his extended claws across the Rotty's nose and the Rotty smiles when he runs the cat up a tree.  I will not be convinced that animals can not show feelings of mirth ...maybe they just do it to please us...whatever...works for me!
yawning dogs has been linked to "calming signals"...if they are in a situation where there is tension, they will yawn to tell the other dogs/people they are trying to cause calm.

personally. my dog yawns when she first gets up. I think she's tired....:-)
Yes...but why do humans laugh when they see someone slip and fall or bump their head. Do other dogs find it funny when they see another dog run into a tree?


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