A University of Queensland-led study has found humans can tell if chickens are excited or displeased, just by the sound of their clucks.
Professor Joerg Henning from UQโs School of Veterinary Science said researchers investigated whether humans could correctly identify the context of calls or clucking sounds made by domestic chickens, the most commonly farmed species in the world.
โIn this study, we used recordings of chickens vocalising in all different scenarios from a previous experiment,โ Professor Henning said.
โTwo calls were produced in anticipation of a reward, which we called the โfoodโ call and the โfast cluckโ.

โTwo other call types were produced in non-reward contexts, such as food being withheld, which we called the โwhineโ and โgakelโ calls.โ
The researchers played the audio files back to test whether humans could tell in which context the chicken sounds were made, and whether various demographics and levels of experience with chickens affected their correct identification.
โWe found 69 per cent of all participants could correctly tell if a chicken sounded excited or displeased,โ Professor Henning said.
โThis is a remarkable result and further strengthens evidence that humans have the ability to perceive the emotional context of vocalisations made by different species.โ
Professor Henning said the ability to detect emotional information from vocalisation could improve the welfare of farmed chickens.
โA substantial proportion of participants being able to successfully recognise calls produced in reward-related contexts is significant,โ he said.
โIt provides confidence that people involved in chicken husbandry can identify the emotional state of the birds they look after, even if they donโt have prior experience.
โOur hope is that in future research, specific acoustic cues that predict how humans rate arousal in chicken calls could be identified, and these results could potentially be used in artificially intelligent based detection systems to monitor vocalisations in chickens.
โThis would allow for the development of automated assessments of compromised or good welfare states within poultry management systems.
โUltimately this could enhance the management of farmed chickens to improve their welfare, while helping conscientious consumers to make more informed purchasing decisions.โ
IMAGE CREDIT: Engin Akyurt.
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