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Autores principales: Mamzer, Hanna, Kuchtar, Maria, Grzegorzewski, Waldemar
Formato: Artículo científico
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI 2026
Acceso en línea:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41681356/
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  • Animals as Communication Partners: Ethics and Challenges in Interspecies Language Research. Mamzer, Hanna Kuchtar, Maria Grzegorzewski, Waldemar Interspecies communication is increasingly recognized as an affective-cognitive process co-created between humans and animals rather than a one-directional transmission of signals. This review integrates findings from ethology, neuroscience, welfare science, behavioral studies, and posthumanist ethics to examine how emotional expression, communicative intentionality, and relational engagement shape understanding across species. Research on primates, dogs, elephants, and marine mammals demonstrates that empathy, consolation, cooperative signaling, and multimodal perception rely on evolutionarily conserved mechanisms, including mirror systems, affective contagion, and oxytocin-mediated bonding. These biological insights intersect with ethical considerations concerning animal agency, methodological responsibility, and the interpretation of non-human communication. Emerging technological tools-bioacoustics, machine vision, and AI-assisted modeling-offer new opportunities to analyze complex vocal and behavioral patterns, yet they require careful contextualization to avoid anthropocentric misclassification. Synthesizing these perspectives, the review proposes a relational framework in which meaning arises through shared emotional engagement, embodied interaction, and ethically grounded interpretation. This approach highlights the importance of welfare-oriented, minimally invasive methodologies and supports a broader shift toward recognizing animals as communicative partners whose emotional lives contribute to scientific knowledge. This review primarily synthesizes empirical and theoretical research on primates and dogs, complemented by selected examples from elephants and marine mammals, which provide the most developed evidence base for the affective-cognitive and relational mechanisms discussed.