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Scientists have discovered what cats are trying to express through their behavior, starting from the tail movement, and trying to steal, to kick out of the room like a shell.

While cat owners are trying to communicate with their pets by understanding the exact language of the body, scientists have discovered that the language cats are particularly concentrated in their tails where cats occasionally make shapes and curves with their tails to communicate with humans.

Carlo Siracusa, researcher at the University of Pennsylvania Veterinary College, says in his research that he has observed cats "during his afternoon nap." He observed that cats were hitting their tails on the ground freely as if they were enjoying a musical song that humans could not hear.

"We have to take the whole cat's body into consideration when reading the signals and movements of the tail, for example, the cat that hits its tail on the land during his nap is generally relaxed, but he pays attention to something that is happening around him, whether it is a voice or movement, so he is quiet but he is not oblivious to his work.

He adds Siracusa, "but if the cat is really asleep, the movement of his tail, can mean that he dreams," explaining that he could indicate the tail struck by strength, for a motivated clamping, on the potential nervousness and aggressiveness, and in other words the cat wants to say "don't come near me, don't touch me!".

A researcher at Penn University, "As for a quiet cat, the straight tail with a curved tip as a question mark, means a cordial salute, while an aggressive cat may make its tail perfectly straight. And the frightened cat has a curved back, and its tail is swollen and headed up. "

"The curved tail may mean the defensive situation, while the resting cat makes its tail in a neutral or low position," Siracusa says.

Siracusa explains the Cats ' decision to launch suddenly as a shell leaving the room as if it were late for a date and going to another room, saying "these streams driven by energy, sometimes called" zoonics ", may be" outlets for the emotions accumulated by excitement, frustration, fear or excess energy ".

Expert Nick Dudeman, author of the book "The Cat Who cried out," agrees that these fast rushing streams when cats can be the suppressed energy of the hunting instinct that they used to hunt prey in the wilderness.

"The cat film may be stealing an expression of the hunter's instinct, which has nothing to hunt," says Dudeman. These cats may be "simulating" the hunt, carrying "imitation prey", to their land, often near their food dishes

Experts interpret the language of cats through their tails

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Scientists have discovered what cats are trying to express through their behavior, starting from the tail movement, and trying to steal, to kick out of the room like a shell.

While cat owners are trying to communicate with their pets by understanding the exact language of the body, scientists have discovered that the language cats are particularly concentrated in their tails where cats occasionally make shapes and curves with their tails to communicate with humans.

Carlo Siracusa, researcher at the University of Pennsylvania Veterinary College, says in his research that he has observed cats "during his afternoon nap." He observed that cats were hitting their tails on the ground freely as if they were enjoying a musical song that humans could not hear.

"We have to take the whole cat's body into consideration when reading the signals and movements of the tail, for example, the cat that hits its tail on the land during his nap is generally relaxed, but he pays attention to something that is happening around him, whether it is a voice or movement, so he is quiet but he is not oblivious to his work.

He adds Siracusa, "but if the cat is really asleep, the movement of his tail, can mean that he dreams," explaining that he could indicate the tail struck by strength, for a motivated clamping, on the potential nervousness and aggressiveness, and in other words the cat wants to say "don't come near me, don't touch me!".

A researcher at Penn University, "As for a quiet cat, the straight tail with a curved tip as a question mark, means a cordial salute, while an aggressive cat may make its tail perfectly straight. And the frightened cat has a curved back, and its tail is swollen and headed up. "

"The curved tail may mean the defensive situation, while the resting cat makes its tail in a neutral or low position," Siracusa says.

Siracusa explains the Cats ' decision to launch suddenly as a shell leaving the room as if it were late for a date and going to another room, saying "these streams driven by energy, sometimes called" zoonics ", may be" outlets for the emotions accumulated by excitement, frustration, fear or excess energy ".

Expert Nick Dudeman, author of the book "The Cat Who cried out," agrees that these fast rushing streams when cats can be the suppressed energy of the hunting instinct that they used to hunt prey in the wilderness.

"The cat film may be stealing an expression of the hunter's instinct, which has nothing to hunt," says Dudeman. These cats may be "simulating" the hunt, carrying "imitation prey", to their land, often near their food dishes
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