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Horses Use Their 'Voices' To express their Emotions, Just Like Humans Do

According to a new Swiss research horses do not differ that much from humans. Intonation is what gives away your emotional state and that is the same for horses. At the Agricultural institute in Zürich they succeeded in comprehending the whinny of a horse. Just like humans it appears these gracious animals are able to express their feelings. The study adds to a small but growing body of research on horse vocalizations. Previous research has shown that whinnies carry information about a horse's sex, body size, and identity, and that horses produce different kinds of sounds when they're excited than when they're distressed. The new research looked at different parameters within the vocalizations with the aim of figuring out just how emotion gets encoded into the sound. Together and alone. For the study, researchers studied 20 horses as they got separated from other horses and then reunited. The researchers recorded the horses' vocalizations and behavior, and measured their heart and breathing rates. What did the scientists find? The horses produced long whinnies when they were separated, and short whinnies when they were reunited. The scientists used the animals' heart and breathing rate data to gauge their level of arousal and, by extension, their emotional state. To their surprise, the scientists found that each whinny actually contained two distinct frequencies -- each conveying a different kind of emotional information. “One frequency [in the whinny] indicates whether the emotion is positive or negative, while the other frequency reveals the strength of the emotion,” Dr. Elodie Briefer, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and the study's lead researcher, said in a written statement. "Such vocalizations with two fundamental frequencies are rare among mammals, in contrast, for example, to songbirds." Better care. The researchers hope their findings will help horse owners and veterinarians better interpret the animals' emotions, and improve animal welfare. They plan to study whether whinnies of wild horses differ from those of domesticated horses, as well as from the vocalizations of other wild and domesticated animals. Previous research has suggested that cows also have complex calls that indicate whether they are calm or distressed. The study was published online on April 21, 2015 in the journal Scientific Reports.

According to a new Swiss research horses do not differ that much from humans. Intonation is what gives away your emotional state and that is the same for horses. At the Agricultural institute in Zürich they succeeded in comprehending the whinny of a horse. Just like humans it appears these gracious animals are able to express their feelings. The study adds to a small but growing body of research on horse vocalizations. Previous research has shown that whinnies carry information about a horse's sex, body size, and identity, and that horses produce different kinds of sounds when they're excited than when they're distressed. The new research looked at different parameters within the vocalizations with the aim of figuring out just how emotion gets encoded into the sound. Together and alone. For the study, researchers studied 20 horses as they got separated from other horses and then reunited. The researchers recorded the horses' vocalizations and behavior, and measured their heart and breathing rates. What did the scientists find? The horses produced long whinnies when they were separated, and short whinnies when they were reunited. The scientists used the animals' heart and breathing rate data to gauge their level of arousal and, by extension, their emotional state. To their surprise, the scientists found that each whinny actually contained two distinct frequencies -- each conveying a different kind of emotional information. “One frequency [in the whinny] indicates whether the emotion is positive or negative, while the other frequency reveals the strength of the emotion,” Dr. Elodie Briefer, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and the study's lead researcher, said in a written statement. "Such vocalizations with two fundamental frequencies are rare among mammals, in contrast, for example, to songbirds." Better care. The researchers hope their findings will help horse owners and veterinarians better interpret the animals' emotions, and improve animal welfare. They plan to study whether whinnies of wild horses differ from those of domesticated horses, as well as from the vocalizations of other wild and domesticated animals. Previous research has suggested that cows also have complex calls that indicate whether they are calm or distressed. The study was published online on April 21, 2015 in the journal Scientific Reports.

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