Irena Schulz
Irena Schulz

Parrots just want to have fun - Dancing Cocky shows parrot's creative side

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Snowball the dancing sulphur-crested cockatoo shakes his tailfeather to music using spontaneous and diverse dance moves just like humans do, say international researchers who studied his behaviour and say it could be a sign of creativity. They say spontaneous movement to music occurs in every human culture and is a foundation of dance, but is absent in most other animal species apart from parrots. They also say Snowball's movements are a social behaviour to interact with his human 'flock' and therefore may show a unique form of creativity - where other animals use creativity to obtain food or mate, Snowball simply does it to fit in!

Journal/conference: Current Biology

Link to research (DOI): 10.1016/j.cub.2019.05.035

Organisation/s: San Diego State University, USA

Funder: Filming and initial data analysis were supported by Neurosciences Research Foundation as part of its program on music and the brain at The Neurosciences Institute (San Diego, CA).

Media Release

From: Cell Press

Snowball the dancing cockatoo has many moves

A sulphur-crested cockatoo named Snowball garnered YouTube fame and headlines a decade ago for his uncanny ability to dance to the beat of the Backstreet Boys. Now, researchers reporting in Current Biology on July 8 are back with new evidence that Snowball isn't limited in his dance moves. Despite a lack of dance training, new videos show that Snowball responds to music with diverse and spontaneous movements using various parts of his body.

The finding is more than an entertaining novelty act. It suggests that dancing to music isn't an arbitrary product of human culture but a response to music that arises when certain cognitive and neural capacities come together in animal brains, the researchers say.

"What's most interesting to us is the sheer diversity of his movements to music," says senior author Aniruddh Patel, a psychologist at Tufts University and Harvard University, noting that Snowball developed those moves--much richer than the head bobbing and foot lifting they'd studied before--without any training.

Patel's earlier study, also published in Current Biology (doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.03.038), confirmed that Snowball could move to the beat. That was notable in part because dancing is a natural ability in humans that's absent in other primates. Soon after that study, Snowball's owner and an author on the new paper, Irena Schulz, noticed that Snowball was making movements to music she hadn't seen before.

This gave the researchers the chance to study another potential similarity between Snowball's movements and human dancing: diversity in the movements and body parts used when responding to music. To quantify Snowball's movement diversity, Patel's team filmed Snowball grooving to two classic hits of the eighties: "Another One Bites the Dust" and "Girls Just Want to Have Fun." They played each of the tunes for him three times for a total of 23 minutes.

At the time, Snowball was 12 years old and had not danced to those songs with anyone other than his owner. During filming, Schulz was in the room shouting an occasional "Good boy." But Snowball was the only one in the room dancing.

To analyze Snowball's movements, the study's first author R. Joanne Jao Keehn, a cognitive neuroscientist and a classically and contemporarily trained dancer, used frame-by-frame analysis with the audio muted. She focused on each "dance movement" or sequence of repeated movements. The movements of interest were clearly intentional, but they weren't an efficient means for Snowball to achieve any plausible external goal.

All told, the video captured Snowball completing a diverse repertoire of 14 dance movements and two composite movements. He bobs, swings, and circles his head around in several different ways, sometimes in coordination with foot lifts or other movements (see video).

Unlike the way humans normally dance, Snowball tended to dance in snippets of about three or four seconds. Each time he heard a particular tune he danced a little differently, a sign of flexibility and perhaps even creativity.

Snowball isn't the first parrot to move to the music, but there has been uncertainty about how such moves are acquired. The researchers propose that the reason humans and parrots share a natural ability to dance may arise from the convergence of five traits: (1) vocal learning, (2) the capacity for nonverbal movement imitation, (3) a tendency to form long-term social bonds, (4) the ability to learn complex sequences of actions, and (5) attentiveness to communicative movements.

For humans, dancing is a form of social interaction. People more often dance with other people than they do alone. Patel says they are currently analyzing data from an experiment designed to find out whether the same is true of Snowball.

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  • Snowball dance move compilation

    A compilation Snowball the cockatoo performing the 14 dance moves found in this study

    File Size: 27.8 MB

    Attribution: Irena Schulz

    Permission Category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last Modified: 10 Jul 2019 12:06am

    Note: High resolution video files are only available for download here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Snowball dance move study

    Excerpt from one trial of the study, with movements labelled using acronyms from Table 1 in the paper

    File Size: 45.4 MB

    Attribution: Irena Schulz

    Permission Category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last Modified: 10 Jul 2019 12:08am

    Note: High resolution video files are only available for download here by registered journalists who are logged in.

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