Hello, kitty: Cats recognize their own names

Summary: Domestic cats are able to discriminate the content of human speech, including recognizing their names, based upon phonemic differences.

Source: University of Tokyo

Pet cats can recognize their own names if their names are used regularly by their owners, according to new results by a team of researchers in Japan.

The research was performed largely within the lab of Professor Toshikazu Hasegawa from the University of Tokyo with Atsuko Saito, Ph.D., first author of the research paper. Saito is now an associate professor at Sophia University in Tokyo.

Evolution of social cats

This is the first project to study cats’ ability to understand human voices. Other research projects have discovered that apes, dolphins, parrots, and dogs can understand some words spoken by humans.

Saito speculates that mammals like dolphins and apes are naturally social animals and are therefore more inclined to interact with humans and respond to human cues.

“In comparison to those other species, cats are not so social. Cats interact with us when they want,” said Saito.

Projects to understand simple social behaviors like name recognition in cats may give clues to how we humans became social. Both humans and cats have evolved through the process of self-domestication, where the population rewards certain traits that then become increasingly common in future generations.

“There may be a common feature in the evolutionary process of sociality between humans and cats. Since cats are still evolving to become more domesticated, there is a possibility that we can see the process of evolution of sociality by investigating the social cognition in cats,” said Saito.

What’s in a name?

To test if a cat recognized its name, researchers tested the name against other similar-sounding nouns. For example, a cat named Kari would also hear recordings of the words hifu (skin) and shuto (capital city).

Researchers played recordings of their own voices and the cat’s owner’s voice saying five words: the first four words were the similar-sounding nouns and the final, fifth word was the cat’s name.

Researchers decided that cats responded to their name if they ignored recordings of other words, but moved their ears or heads when they heard their name. Cats rarely responded more enthusiastically, for example by moving their tails or bodies or by using their voice.

Cats who showed habituated weak responses to other similar-sounding nouns or the names of other cohabiting cats were significantly more likely to show strong responses to their own names.

Researchers state that a cat that did not respond to its name may still be able to recognize its name.

“Their lack of response may be caused by their low motivation level to interact with humans or their feelings at the time of the experiment,” said Saito.

Saito offers simple advice to any cat owners wishing to increase their communication with their cat: “Please interact with your cat when she shows that she wants to interact with you.”

Single or many cats?

Researchers also tested if cats can distinguish between their own names and those of other cohabitating cats. Cats living in homes were more likely than cats living in a cat café to distinguish between their own names and the names of cohabitating cats.

Cat cafés are businesses where people pay for a drink and to interact with the many cats who live in the café.

Researchers suspect that owners use their cats’ names specifically at home, whereas cat café visitors may use the cats’ names interchangeably.

Researchers analyzed data from 77 different cats in the research project, which was broken into four separate experiments performed over three years.

This is a cat sitting on a book shelf
Projects to understand simple social behaviors like name recognition in cats may give clues to how we humans became social. Both humans and cats have evolved through the process of self-domestication, where the population rewards certain traits that then become increasingly common in future generations. The image is in the public domain.

Cats studied in the research were between six months to 17 years old, a mix of male and female, and were mostly mixed breeds. Most cats were spayed/neutered and all but one were indoor-only cats.

Professor Toshikazu Hasegawa is now retired from the University of Tokyo.

Research scientist Kazutaka Shinozuka, Ph.D., from the RIKEN Center for Brain Science also contributed to this research.

According to previous research, cats can distinguish between their owner’s voice and a stranger’s voice, can follow a person’s pointing finger to find hidden food, and may change their behavior depending on their owner’s facial expressions.

Well-trained dogs can differentiate between 200 to 1,000 human words or labels.

Worldwide, over 600 million cats live with humans. Japan has 9.5 million pet cats and 8.9 million pet dogs.

About this neuroscience research article

Source:
University of Tokyo
Media Contacts:
Media Office – University of Tokyo
Image Source:
The image is in the public domain.

Original Research: Open access
“Domestic cats (Felis catus) discriminate their names from other words”. Atsuko Saito, Kazutaka Shinozuka, Yuki Ito, Toshikazu Hasegawa.
Scientific Reports 2019; 9 (1) doi:10.1038/s41598-019-40616-4

Abstract

Domestic cats (Felis catus) discriminate their names from other words

Two of the most common nonhuman animals that interact with humans are domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and cats (Felis catus). In contrast to dogs, the ability of domestic cats to communicate with humans has not been explored thoroughly. We used a habituation-dishabituation method to investigate whether domestic cats could discriminate human utterances, which consisted of cats’ own names, general nouns, and other cohabiting cats’ names. Cats from ordinary households and from a ‘cat café’ participated in the experiments. Among cats from ordinary households, cats habituated to the serial presentation of four different general nouns or four names of cohabiting cats showed a significant rebound in response to the subsequent presentation of their own names; these cats discriminated their own names from general nouns even when unfamiliar persons uttered them. These results indicate that cats are able to discriminate their own names from other words. There was no difference in discrimination of their own names from general nouns between cats from the cat café and household cats, but café cats did not discriminate their own names from other cohabiting cats’ names. We conclude that cats can discriminate the content of human utterances based on phonemic differences.

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