Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on In What Ways Can Animals Communicate With Humans?. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. Humans often forget they are not the only living beings who have the ability to communicate both within and outside of their own species. This oversight causes considerable frustration on the humans' part inasmuch as they fail to understand what animals are "saying" to them through other means beyond verbal such as body language and sounds. People have become so dependent upon speech as the primary way in which to communicate that they are often unwilling to accept there is any other way; however, humans are not the only species that use vocabulary but just as with any foreign language, they are not able to understand an animal's grunts, growls and barks until studying what those "words" mean to that species. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCAnComHum.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the humans part inasmuch as they fail to understand what animals are "saying" to them through other means beyond verbal such as body language and sounds. People have become
so dependent upon speech as the primary way in which to communicate that they are often unwilling to accept there is any other way; however, humans are not the only
species that use vocabulary but just as with any foreign language, they are not able to understand an animals grunts, growls, chirps, whines, screams, barks, snorts and other vocalizations until
studying what those "words" mean to that species. Dogs - having been domesticated by and bonded to humans - are a prime example
of how animals successfully communicate with people. Canine companions live their entire lives in the environment of human beings and thereby pick up many cues about how to communicate
their needs based upon repetitive actions by their owners. However, the people must also learn how to recognize the dogs hard-wired form of communication in order for each species
to live in harmony. For example, the dog is taught to scratch at the door when nature calls, which signals the person to allow access outside for the dogs
learned behavior of relieving himself. If, however, the owner is not home or is otherwise preoccupied and does not respond to the dogs communication and ultimately soils in the
house, he sees what he believes to be guilt by the way in which the dog responds upon his human finding the puddle. Knowing he was taught to go
outside but being unable to do so can make a dog submissive (cowers, ears down, lays low) as a way of apologizing to his pack leader for doing wrong.
...