Cats exploit humans!

Nix

Nix

Soldato
Joined
26 Dec 2005
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19,841
Cat lovers, you fools! You've been had!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8147566.stm

Cat owners may have suspected as much, but it seems our feline friends have found a way to manipulate us humans.

Researchers at the University of Sussex have discovered that cats use a "soliciting purr" to overpower their owners and garner attention and food.

Unlike regular purring, this sound incorporates a "cry", with a similar frequency to a human baby's.

The team said cats have "tapped into" a human bias - producing a sound that humans find very difficult to ignore.

Dr Karen McComb, the lead author of the study that was published in the journal Current Biology, said the research was inspired by her own cat, Pepo.

"He would wake me up in the morning with this insistent purr that was really rather annoying," Dr McComb told BBC News.
Larry the cat
Impossible to resist: cats use sounds that humans are "highly sensitive" to

"After a little bit of investigation, I discovered that there are other cat owners who are similarly bombarded early in the morning."

While meowing might get a cat expelled from the bedroom, Dr McComb said that this pestering purr often convinced beleaguered pet lovers to get up and fill their cat's bowl.

To find out why, her team had to train cat owners to make recordings of their own cats' vocal tactics - recording both their "soliciting purrs" and regular, "non-soliciting" purrs.

"When we played the recordings to human volunteers, even those people with no experience of cats found the soliciting purrs more urgent and less pleasant," said Dr McComb.

How annoying?

She and her team also asked the volunteers to rate the different purrs - giving them a score based on how urgent and pleasant they perceived them to be.

"We could then relate the scores back to the specific purrs," explained Dr McComb. "The key thing (that made the purrs more unpleasant and difficult to ignore) was the relative level of this embedded high-frequency sound."

Stan the cat
They learn how to do this, and then they do it quite deliberately
Karen McComb
University of Sussex

"When an animal vocalises, the vocal folds (or cords) held across the stream of air snap shut at a particular frequency," explained Dr McComb. The perceived pitch of that sound depends on the size, length and tension of the vocal folds.

"But cats are able to produce a low frequency purr by activating the muscles of their vocal folds - stimulating them to vibrate," explained Dr McComb.

Since each of these sounds is produced by a different mechanism, cats are able to embed a high-pitched cry in an otherwise relaxing purr.

"How urgent and unpleasant the purr is seems to depend on how much energy the cat puts into producing that cry," said Dr McComb.

Previous studies have found similarities between a domestic cat's cry and the cry of a human baby - a sound that humans are highly sensitive to.

Dr McComb said that the cry occurs at a low level in cats' normal purring. "But we think that (they) learn to dramatically exaggerate it when it proves effective in generating a response from humans."

She added that the trait seemed to most often develop in cats that have a one-on-one relationship with their owners.

"Obviously we don't know what's going on inside their minds," said Dr McComb. "But they learn how to do this, and then they do it quite deliberately."

So how does Dr McComb feel about Pepo now she knows he has been manipulating her all these years?

"He's been the inspiration for this whole study, so I'll forgive him - credit where credit's due."

And in the interest of debate: dogs > cats.
 
Not so much a cooing purr, but ours tends to emit an extended meeow - almost a sentence - of different sounds when he wants food. And we are both convinced that he has managed to vocalise the word milk, which comes out as a sort of "Meeoolk" the fact he only uses that particular expression at the times he is likely to get milk.

Of course, he could also just be saying, "Look mate, get me my frapping food out or I'll rip your face off..."
 
They can't be that smart if they're purring rather than just meowing. Then again, the owners are equally stupid to leave their bedroom door open and then complaining about being woken by a cat in the middle of the night! My cats stand over their food bowl and meow when they're hungy, makes much more sense to me.
 
our cat gets our attention for her morning feed by jumping on the bed and biting my ankles. Cute she most certainly is not.
 
Mine used to have a great way of demanding food. You know that playful swipe that cats do with their paws, well he used to swipe his bowl so it banged into the skirting board then poke one eye around the corner of the door to see if you heard him.
 
I have known this for some time.

DSCN0094.jpg
 
Our cats have perfected the "feed me" meow. Although they're nowhere near as loud as our old cat.
The news that cats now how to exploit there owners doesn't suprise me at all. Far more intelligent than dogs.

Cats > Dogs :p
 
"Previous studies have found similarities between a domestic cat's cry and the cry of a human baby"

This can't be right. How can a gentle, rumbling purr match the window shattering, twitch inducing, hellish screech of a baby's cry?
 
"Previous studies have found similarities between a domestic cat's cry and the cry of a human baby"

This can't be right. How can a gentle, rumbling purr match the window shattering, twitch inducing, hellish screech of a baby's cry?
Have you ever had a cat?
 
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