Animals can be Tickled and Laugh just Like Us
67© janderson99-HubPages
Do you think that only humans laugh and can be tickled to laugh? Well think again because several researchers and animal keepers have shown that many animals can laugh.
This applies not just to monkeys and apes, cats and dogs, but to rats and mice. It also says many things about how similar we are to many animals.
Apes have a very human-like response to being tickled - they giggle, squirm and laugh just like children and adults.
In a 2009 study published in the journal, Current Biology, the researchers compared the sounds that juvenile great apes (orangutans, chimpanzees, gorillas and bonobos) made when they were tickled, with the laughter sounds made by human children when tickled.
The study showed that there were many similarities in the sounds, with the differences mirroring the evolutionary tree of the primates.
It suggested a common ancestor for apes and humans that giggled when tickled.
However other research has shown that many other animals are ticklish and giggle including rats and mice, cats and dogs.
Researchers discovered that rodents emitted high-pitched chirps when tickled which were outside hearing frequency range of human hearing.
The same noises were made by rats and mice.
A search of videos on internet showed evidence of giggling when tickled in a wide range of animals including owls, dogs, cats, meerkats, penguins, and even a dolphin and a camel.
The researchers do not say that other animals laugh like humans, but they produce special vocalisations as expressions of joy when tickled.
However these sounds may help to understand how laughter evolved.
Konrad Lorenz, the famous ethnologist, also proposed that dogs are capable of producing a laughing sound which in dogs is a distinctive panting pattern.
Charles Darwin noticed that chimps and other apes emit laughter-like sounds when they are playing or when they are tickled.
The famous Jane Goodall described this as breathy panting or grunting. The laughter-like sounds of chimpanzee are much breathier.
Humans tends to chop their laughter breaths (or pants) into short "ha-ha" sounds.
Studies of the laughter sounds of dogs show that is a pant with a 'hhuh, hhuh", sound. Laughter is infectious in dogs as it is in humans.
When a group of 15 puppies were played a recording of a dog laughing they romped and rolled around joyfully.
For another interesting study see: Sheep ain't no Dumb Blonds
© janderson99-HubPages
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Wow, what a great Hub! I have always loved animals and believe they do many things that people just don't realize they're doing...like the laughing. Congrats on your 400th Hub...wow, that's a lot of hubs! I'm going to check out some more of yours for sure! Happy New Year.
I agree. Dogs can laugh. My Miniature Schauzer seems to laugh gleefully when we play. I can't imagine writing 400 Hubs. Great!












alocsin Level 8 Commenter 4 months ago
A thought-provoking article. I enjoyed all the pictures of happy animals. We're probably seeing a lot more into animal expressions than we should, but it's fun to think that they can laugh. Voting this Up and Interesting.