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Cats may not have your tongue, but they do want your ear so that you'll hear their purrs as hunger pangs.
Cats may not have your tongue, but they do want your ear so that you’ll hear their purrs as hunger pangs.
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NEW YORK — A cat’s purr normally says, “I’m happy.”

But a new study suggests some purrs send cat owners a much different message: “Feed me!”

Researchers found that purrs of hungry cats included a higher-pitched sound, somewhat like a cry or meow.

They played recordings of these purrs from 10 cats to 50 human volunteers.

Even people who had never owned a cat found them to be more urgent and less pleasant than contented purrs from the same animals.

These food-seeking purrs may exploit the way humans naturally respond to a baby’s cry, the researchers suggest.

Not all cats use this strategy, but some apparently learn to turn it on when they see that it’s effective in getting a human to feed them, Karen McComb of the University of Sussex in England said in a statement.

She and co-authors present their work in today’s issue of the journal Current Biology.

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