Birds bust a move to musical beats
Parrots display a flair for moving in time to music, a skill usually attributed only to people
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TINY DANCERVideo | New research shows that Snowball the sulfur-crested cockatoo moves in time to musical beats, an ability long attributed only to people.Aniruddh D. Patel, John R. Iversen, Micah R. Bregman, and Irena Schulz

View videos of the parrots dancing.

Don’t begrudge Snowball his hankering for boy bands. The sulfur-crested cockatoo with a spiky haircut bobs his head, sways his body and stomps his feet in time to the beat of pop songs such as the Backstreet Boys’ “Everybody.”

Two new studies, published online April 30 and slated to appear in Current Biology, indicate that he and members of many other parrot species can synchronize head bobs and other rhythmic movements to musical beats. Until now, most researchers thought that only people align physical movements to timed sounds, a phenomenon known as entrainment.

“This is the first evidence that there could be an animal model of rhythm perception in music,” says neuroscientist Aniruddh Patel of The Neurosciences Institute in San Diego. Patel directed one of the new investigations.

In 2006, Patel proposed that brain circuitry for vocal learning gets co-opted to support musical-beat perception and synchronized movements to music. This would explain why humans and parrots can imitate sounds and move in time to a beat. But animals that can’t imitate sounds, including chimpanzees, monkeys, dogs and cats, can’t keep the beat. If Patel’s right, then other vocal mimics — including songbirds, dolphins, elephants, walruses and seals — should be able to get their groove on.

Music’s origins remain a mystery. Some researchers regard music as a pleasurable by-product of other mental skills, such as language. Others suspect music arose as an evolutionary adaptation to Stone Age life, perhaps to promote social cohesion. Whatever the case, even newborns recognize rhythmic sequences (SN: 2/14/09, p. 14).

“Even if entrainment emerged as a by-product of vocal mimicry, other parts of music perception and cognition may easily be adaptive,” says Harvard University’s Adena Schachner, a psychology graduate student who directed the other new study.

Evidence of what amounts to a kind of dancing to music by at least some parrot species “comes as a big surprise,” remarks psychologist W. Tecumseh Fitch of the University of St. Andrews in Fife, Scotland. “Scientists have claimed that this capacity is uniquely human for several decades.”

Fitch says the parrots can serve as an animal model to probe brain mechanisms involved in synchronizing movements to musical beats. The new findings also underscore the need to examine how parrots use vocal mimicry and, possibly, entrainment in the wild, Fitch says.

The fact that Snowball and other bopping birds exhibit entrainment without making music themselves supports the idea that “the ability to entrain is a side effect of brain mechanisms that evolved to support other functions in humans,” comments neuroscientist Josh McDermott of New York University.

But parrots won’t provide an animal model of entrainment if further work shows that they perceive sound rhythms using different brain mechanisms than people, McDermott adds. Such a finding would suggest entrainment evolved at least twice. It’s also unclear to what extent training or encouragement by others affects the ability of either parrots or people to move in time to music, he notes.

Patel’s team studied Snowball after seeing a YouTube video of the cockatoo’s deftly synchronized moves to a pop song. Now 12 years old, Snowball was given to a bird-rescue facility almost two years ago by his owners.

In experiments Patel and his team conducted at the bird-rescue service, Snowball perched on the back of an armchair and listened to his favorite dancing tune, the Backstreet Boys’ “Everybody.” The music sped up or slowed down across a range of tempos on different trials.

Snowball frequently adjusted the tempo of his dancing to stay synchronized to the beat, Patel says. Bouts of synchronized movement were interspersed with periods during which Snowball danced more slowly or quickly than the beat. Experiments conducted by other researchers have found a similar pattern of intermittent entrainment among dancing preschool children.

Schachner’s group played familiar and unfamiliar musical pieces to Snowball, to an African gray parrot named Alex and to eight human volunteers. Alex was studied before his death in September 2007.

When listening to the same music, the birds synchronized their movements to the beat about as accurately as volunteers tapped a button to the beat.

The researchers then analyzed thousands of YouTube videos showing several hundred animal species moving to music. Signs of entrainment to a beat appeared only in vocal mimics, represented by 14 parrot species and Asian elephants that moved their trunks or legs in time with music.

Patel suspects that, as with people, some parrots have rhythm to spare and others can’t pick up a beat with a forklift. Snowball’s dancing, it seems, has more in common with boy band *NSYNC.


ROCKIN’ COCKATOO

Snowball, a sulfur-crested cockatoo, bobs his head, sways his body and stomps his feet to a percussive musical tune. Experiments indicate that Snowball is able to synchronize his movements to a musical beat, challenging the longstanding belief that only people can dance in this way.


SHAKE A TAIL FEATHER

Alex the African gray parrot takes a cool, head-bobbing approach to moving with the music, whereas Snowball fiercely stomps out the beat to Queen’s "Another One Bites The Dust."


Found in: Life and Zoology
Comments 7
  • I am actually surprised that this is "new" news! I had a finch in the 70's as a child who, believe it or not, LOVED the song "Rockin Robin" by Michael Jackson! Every time we put it on she would jump up and down on her perch exactly in time to the beat. We'd always put the song on for her after school and dance with her to it.

    I think it was the tweets in the song that made her love it so much. I'm sure she was terribly lonely as a single bird, but there was NO DOUBT that she danced to it. She wasn't that way on any other song that we found.

    Humans underestimate the animal world so badly. It really is shameful. Humans need to get off their "we're so wonderful" pedestal I think!
    El El
    Apr. 30, 2009 at 1:27pm
  • Oh I forgot to add something to my previous comment!! Not only did my sweet little finch bob up and down but she tweeted in time to the music as well for the entire song! :)
    El El
    Apr. 30, 2009 at 2:02pm
  • It's great to see this fact, which many bird owners have known for some time, finally confirmed by science! Hopefully this will help us understand the brain mechanisms of music better.
    Robert Price Robert Price
    May. 1, 2009 at 1:04am
  • Oh, well, another story which should have been titled "Scientists finally notice [insert well-known fact here]"
    Rand McNatt Rand McNatt
    May. 1, 2009 at 10:39am
  • Birds have brains organized quite differently than ours. That they would respond physically to hearing music is not that big a discovery. After all, they use complex melodies and cadences in their songs, and have very complex mating rituals. Cockatoos will also take a stick, and drum on a hollow tree to attract a mate. When animals are taken from their wild environments, and social groups, and raised with humans, they seem to take on some aspects of their Human Masters, but this behavior 'in extremis' should not be taken as anything but what it is. They are not "little people"! They are wild animals being held captive by silly people.
    James Boettcher James Boettcher
    May. 2, 2009 at 11:50am
  • I wonder if birds that have been exposed to more music will have better rhythm? We've always kept our conure next to the piano. She likes dancing to a boogie-woogie.
    Jbird Jbird
    May. 2, 2009 at 2:04pm
  • Snowball isn't just bopping to the rhythm, he is interpretively dancing to the emotional content of the music. This strongly suggests that he is using a similar mechanism to humans.

    Interpretive dance is most apparent in the Animal Planet's Most Outrageous Talented Pets, it will be shown again May 09, 5:00 pm.

    inveganatheist inveganatheist
    May. 5, 2009 at 1:16pm
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  • For more on Aniruddh Patel’s research: [Go to]
  • For more on Adena Schachner’s research: [Go to]
Citations & References:
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  • Patel, A., et al., "Experimental Evidence for Synchronization to a Musical Beat in a Nonhuman Animal," published online April 30, 2009, Current Biology, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2009.03.038
  • Schachner, A., et al., "Spontaneous Motor Entrainment to Music in Multiple Vocal Mimicking Species," published online April 30, 2009, Current Biology, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2009.03.061
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