Dear colleagues: we are pleased to announce the recent publication of the 
following paper:
Abramson, Z. J., Hernández-Lloreda, MV, Call, J. y Colmenares F. 
(2012).  Experimental evidence of action imitation in killer whales (Orcinus 
orca). Animal Cognition. DOI: 10.1007/s10071-012-0546-2
The article has just been published and is available as 'Online First' on 
SpringerLink:

http://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.1007/s10071-012-0546-2 
Please feel free to contact me with any questions about this article. 
Best regards,
José Z. Abramson.
Abstract

Comparative experimental studies of imitative learning have focused mainly on 
primates and birds. However, cetaceans are promising candidates to display 
imitative learning as they have evolved in socioecological settings that have 
selected for large brains, complex sociality, and coordinated predatory 
tactics. Here we tested imitative learning in killer whales, Orcinus orca. We 
used a ‘do-as-other-does’ paradigm in which 3 subjects witnessed a conspecific 
demonstrator’s performance that included 15 familiar and 4 novel behaviours. 
The three subjects (1) learned the copy command signal ‘Do that’ very quickly, 
that is, 20 trials on average; (2) copied 100 % of the demonstrator’s familiar 
and novel actions; (3) achieved full matches in the first attempt for 8–13 
familiar behaviours (out of 15) and for the 2 novel behaviours (out of 2) in 
one subject; and (4) took no longer than 8 trials to accurately copy any 
familiar behaviour, and no longer than 16 trials to copy any novel behaviour. 
This study provides experimental evidence for body imitation, including 
production imitation, in killer whales that is comparable to that observed in 
dolphins tested under similar conditions. These findings suggest that imitative 
learning may underpin some of the group-specific traditions reported in killer 
whales in the field.
Keywords:  Social learning – Imitation – ‘Do-as-other-does’ test – Animal 
culture –Killer whales

José F. Zamorano-Abramson. PhD. Departamento de Psicobiología Facultad de 
Psicología Universidad Complutense de Madrid Campus de Somosaguas 28223 Madrid, 
Spain e-mail: [email protected] 



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