(CNN.com, 2, Nov 2012) - Korean is considered one of the hardest
languages in the world to master, but an elephant in a South Korean zoo is
making a good start.
Journal article: http://www.cell.com/current-biology/retrieve/pii/S096098221201086X
Journal article: http://www.cell.com/current-biology/retrieve/pii/S096098221201086X
Koshik, a 22-year-old Asian elephant has stunned experts and
his keepers at Everland Zoo near Seoul by imitating human speech. Koshik can
say the Korean words for "hello," "sit down,"
"no," "lie down" and "good." His trainer, Kim
Jong Gap, first started to realize Koshik was mimicking him several years ago.
"In 2004 and 2005, Kim didn't even know that the
human voice he heard at the zoo was actually from Koshik," zoo spokesman
In Kim In Cherl said. "But in 2006, he started to realize that Koshik had
been imitating his voice and mentioned it to his boss."
His boss initially called him "crazy."
Koshik's remarkable antics grabbed the interest of an
elephant vocalization expert thousands of kilometers away at the University of
Vienna in Austria.
""There was a YouTube video about Koshik
vocalizing, and I was not sure if it was a fake, or if it was real," Dr.
Angela Stoeger-Horwath said. She traveled with fellow expert Dr. Daniel
Mietchen to South Korea in 2010 to test the elephant's ability.
They recorded Koshik repeating certain words his keeper said and then played them for native Korean speakers to see, if they were recognizable.
They recorded Koshik repeating certain words his keeper said and then played them for native Korean speakers to see, if they were recognizable.
"It is, for some of the sounds he makes, quite
astonishing for how similar they are," said Mietchen of the University of
Jena in Germany. "For instance the word 'choa' (meaning good) -- if you
hear it right after what the keeper says -- it's quite similar."
The findings have been published in the journal Current
Biology this week and describe how Koshik places the tip of his trunk into his
mouth to produce his convincing impression of a human voice.
Koshik was born in captivity in 1990 and was transferred to
Everland Zoo a few years later. From the age of 5 to 12 there were no other
elephants with Koshik at the zoo, and his only interaction was with humans. The
researchers believe Koshik may have learned certain words out of necessity
"to cement social bonds."
Koshik is expected to draw quite a crowd when the public sees him in the spring after construction at the zoo is completed.
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