For those with a deep suspicion of cats and their motivations, this may well be the scientific proof they have been waiting for. New research has laid bare the degree to which cats exploit humans.
Instead of loud miaowing when they want food — behavior likely to have them ejected from the bedroom — some cats disguise their cries for attention within an otherwise pleasant purr.
The result, according to a study published on Monday in the journal Current Biology, is a complex “solicitation” purr with a high-frequency element that triggers a sense of urgency in the human brain. Owners find it irritating, but not irritating enough to kick the cat out, and feel driven to respond.
Karen McComb, a specialist in mammal vocal communication at the University of Sussex, England, said that by employing an embedded cry, cats appear to be exploiting innate tendencies that humans have for nurturing offspring.
“The embedding of a cry within a call that we normally associate with contentment is quite a subtle means of eliciting a response — and solicitation purring is probably more acceptable to humans than overt meowing,” she said.
McComb, whose usual subjects include African elephants and lions in the wild, began the research into domestic cats after noticing the “manipulative” purring of her own cat, Pepo.
“I wondered why this purring sounded so annoying and was so difficult to ignore,” she said. “Talking with other cat owners, I found that some of them also had cats which showed similar behavior.”
After testing human responses to different purring types, McComb and her team found that even those with no experience of cats judged the “solicitation” purr to be more urgent and less pleasant.
On examining the frequency of the special purr, she found a peak similar to that of a baby’s cry, which gave it a “noisy, slightly whiny quality.”
However, not all cats have the cry; the researchers, who examined 10 cats, found it only in those living in single-person households.
“We found that cats learn to dramatically emphasise the peak when dealing with human owners that have a one-on-one relationship,” McComb said.
Asked whether the cat’s special purr is more effective than a dog’s bark, or other demand for food, she said: “I think it might be more effective than a dog. If you ask people who own cats what they do when they get up they say they feed their cats. Even before they have a cup of coffee. Cats are very good at getting their own way.”
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