Image courtesy of University of California, Santa Cruz Middle-aged white guys awkwardly nodding along to songs might want to take a tip from Ronan the sea lion, who has turned that beat around — and turned a theory about rhythmic ability on its head. Ronan is the first known non-human mammal successfully trained to bob her head in time with a metronome-like sound — and then to apply her new skill to tempos and music she had not previously heard, according to researchers at the Long Marine Laboratory at the University of California, Santa Cruz. The sea lion demonstrated her mad skillz at “rhythmic entertainment entrainment,” more commonly known as keeping the beat, in a video released in conjunction with researchers’ findings in this week’s Journal of Comparative Psychology. Aside from the adorable factor, Ronan’s performance challenges the theory that only animals with a capacity for complex vocal learning, such ...
Sea Lion is First Non-Human Mammal to Keep a Beat
Ronan the sea lion showcases rhythmic entertainment entrainment, proving non-human mammals can keep the beat with surprising skill.
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