There's a
natural temptation to either exaggerate or downplay the difference between
animal communication and human language. While some seek to highlight our
uniqueness, others aim to blend us into the natural world. However, recent
science suggests a fascinating reality: animal communication possesses
astonishing complexity, yet there remains an unbridgeable cognitive
boundary—writing, or graphic externalization.
In this
post, we explore how science is redefining animal intelligence and why writing
remains the definitive "evolutionary leap."
Structure
and Complexity: What Do Animals Actually Do?
In 1967,
ethologist Karl von Frisch published his description of the "waggle
dance" of honeybees—a discovery that earned him the Nobel Prize in 1973.
Bees encode the direction and distance of a nectar source relative to the sun,
a form of abstract spatial reference once thought to be uniquely human (von
Frisch, 1967).
Nevertheless,
this system is rigid: a bee cannot invent a new concept or leave a
"written" message for foragers on the next shift.
Syntax in
the Sky: The Language of Birds
Ornithological
research has definitively dismantled the outdated view that reduced avian
communication to simple instinctive calls or generic alarms. Today, we know
their information-exchange systems possess a structure far closer to our own
than previously believed.
According
to Suzuki (2016), species like the Japanese tit (Parus minor) employ
functional reference. This means they use signals that point to specific
external objects or situations, for example, emitting distinct alarm calls to
identify different types of predators, enabling the rest of the flock to
execute the appropriate evasion maneuver.
Recently, a
study by Araiba (2025) experimentally validated that these systems possess
compositional syntax: a set of rules governing how message elements combine to
modify or create entirely new meanings. By confirming that the order of notes
follows strict rules—where altering the sequence changes the final message, this
work bridges naturalistic observation with behavioral language analysis.
Quantitative
Linguistics in the Ocean
In the deep
sea, cetacean communication reaches surprising levels of technical complexity.
A study published in Science demonstrated that humpback whale song (Megaptera
novaeangliae) follows two universal principles of quantitative linguistics:
- Zipf's Law: More frequent elements tend
to be shorter.
- Menzerath's Law: Longer structures are
composed of shorter units (Arnon et al., 2025).
These
patterns, also present in human language, suggest they are emergent properties
of any complex communication system.
🔬 Did You
Know? Orcas Have Vocal "Surnames"
Each
family group develops its own vocal dialect, transmitted from mothers to
offspring through social learning (Filatova et al., 2010). Sperm whales (Physeter
macrocephalus) use "codas”, sequences of clicks that vary by clan and
are maintained through cultural transmission (Weilgart & Whitehead, 1993).
Great
Apes: The Threshold of Symbolism
Research
with bonobos (Pan paniscus) has revealed what is known as nontrivial
compositionality: the capacity to combine vocalizations to create messages
whose meaning exceeds the sum of their parts (Berthet et al., 2025).
Meanwhile,
Gabrić (2022) analyzed drumming patterns in chimpanzees in Taï National Park,
finding that they assemble complex messages by joining simple acoustic
units—remarkably like how humans combine verbs when speaking.
Given that
we share 98.7% of our genome with bonobos and chimpanzees (Prufer et al.,
2012), these findings indicate that the cognitive roots of symbolism run far
deeper than we once suspected.
The
Definitive Difference: Graphic Externalization
Despite
these advances, a critical difference persists. Consider the case of Kanzi, the
bonobo who incidentally learned to associate more than 400 lexigrams (graphic
symbols) with objects and actions (Savage-Rumbaugh et al., 1998).
Although
Kanzi comprehended basic syntax in spoken English, he never spontaneously
produced written sequences to communicate with absent peers or narrate past
events.
Key
Definition: The distinction between using symbols as tools and
using writing as a technology of autonomous externalization remains the
greatest divider in cognitive evolution. No animal—however complex its song or
dance—has ever succeeded in recording knowledge on a surface for others to
consult decades after its death.
💬 We Want
to Hear From You
Where do you
draw the line between animal communication and human language? Do you believe
Artificial Intelligence could someday close this "externalization
gap," or is writing an exclusively human evolutionary leap?
Share your
reflections or examples in the comments below!
References
Araiba, S.
(2025). A search for language in birds in the lab and the wild. Journal of
the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 124(3), e70063.
https://doi.org/10.1002/jeab.70063
Arnon, I.,
et al. (2025). Universal linguistic laws in humpback whale song structure. Science.
Berthet,
M., et al. (2025). Nontrivial compositionality in wild bonobo vocal sequences. Science.
Filatova,
O. A., Miller, P. J. O., Samara, V., Yurk, H., & Tawzer, R. (2010).
Cultural transmission of vocal dialects in killer whales (Orcinus orca).
Animal Behaviour, 79(4), 847–854.
Gabrić, P.
(2022). Combinatorial drumming in chimpanzees: Acoustic structure and message
complexity. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 76(1), 1–12.
Prufer, K.,
et al. (2012). The bonobo genome compared with the chimpanzee and human
genomes. Nature, 486(7404), 527–531.
Savage-Rumbaugh,
E. S., Segerdahl, K., & Fields, W. M. (1998). Lexigram use and language
comprehension in the bonobo Kanzi. Georgia State University Press.
Suzuki, T.
N. (2016). Semantic communication in birds: Evidence from field research over
the past two decades. Ecological Research, 31, 307–319.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11284-016-1339-x
von Frisch,
K. (1967). The dance language and orientation of bees. Harvard
University Press.
Weilgart,
L. S., & Whitehead, H. (1993). Distinctive vocalizations and group
membership in sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus). Behavioral
Ecology and Sociobiology, 33(6), 425–430.


