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No one knows for sure why a domestic cat purrs, but many people interpret the sound as one of contentment. Our understanding of why a domestic cat purrs is becoming more complete; most scientists agree that the larynx (voice box), laryngeal muscles, and a neural oscillator are involved. ûÓÐÈËÈ·ÇÐÖªµÀΪºÎ¼Òè»á·¢³öºôààÉù£¬µ«ºÜ¶àÈ˶¼°ÑÕâÖÖÉùÒôÀí½â³ÉÊÇÒ»ÖÖÐÄÂúÒâ×ãµÄ±íÏÖ¡£ÎÒÃÇÈËÀà¶ÔÓÚ¼ÒèΪºÎ·¢ºôààÉùµÄÈÏʶÕýÈÕÇ÷ÍêÉÆ£»´ó¶àÊý¿ÆÑ§¼Ò¶¼Ô޳ɸÃÏÖÏóÓëºí¡¢ºí²¿¼¡ÈâºÍÉñ¾ÔªÕñµ´Æ÷Óйء£
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Kittens learn how to purr when they are a couple of days old. Vets suggest that this purring tells "Mom" that "I am okay" and that "I am here". It also indicates a bonding mechanism between kitten and mother. Ó×èÔÚ¼¸Ìì´óµÄʱºò¾Íѧ»á·¢³öºôààÉùÁË¡£ÊÞÒ½ÃÇÈÏΪÕâÊÇÔÚ¸æËßèÂèÂè¡°ÎÒͦºÃµÄ¡±ºÍ¡°ÎÒÔÚÕâ¶ùÄØ¡±Ö®ÀàµÄÐÅÏ¢¡£·¢ºôààÉùҲ˵Ã÷Ó×èºÍèÂèÂèÖ®¼ä´æÔÚ×ÅÒ»ÖÖÇ×ÃܵÄÐÄÀí¸ÐÓ¦¹ØÏµ¡£
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As the kitten grows into adulthood, purring continues. Many suggest a cat purrs from contentment and pleasure. But a cat also purrs when it is injured and in pain. Dr. Elizabeth Von Muggenthaler, a famous bioacoustician, has suggested that the purr, with its low frequency vibrations, is a "natural healing mechanism". Purring may be linked to the strengthening and repairing of bones, relief of pain, and wound healing. Ó×è³É³¤Îª³ÉÄêèµÄ¹ý³ÌÖУ¬»á¼ÌÐø·¢³öºôààÉù¡£ºÜ¶àÈ˶¼ÈÏΪèÊÇÒòΪÂú×ãºÍÓä¿ì²Å·¢³öÕâÖÖÉùÒôµÄ¡£µ«ÊÇ£¬Ã¨ÊÜÁËÉË»ò´¦ÓÚÌÛÍ´ÖÐʱ£¬Ò²»á·¢³öºôààÉù¡£ÖøÃûµÄÉúÎïÉúѧ¼ÒÒÁÀöɯ°×•·ë•ĸùËþÀÕÌá³ö£¬ºôààÉùÁ¬Í¬ÆäµÍƵÕñ¶¯ÊÇÒ»ÖÖ¡°ÌìÈ»µÄÖÎÁÆ»úÖÆ¡±¡£·¢³öºôààÉù»òÐíÓë¹Ç÷ÀµÄ¼Ó¹ÌÓë½ÃÕý£¬¼õÇáÌÛÍ´ÒÔ¼°ÓúºÏÉË¿ÚÓÐ×ÅijÖÖÁªÏµ¡£
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Purring is a unique vocal feature in the domestic cat. However, other species in the Felidae family also purr: bobcat, cheetah, Eurasian lynx, puma, and wild cat. Although some big cats like lions exhibit a purr-like sound, studies show that the Patherinae subfamily: lion, tiger, leopard, jaguar, snow leopard, and clouded leopard do not exhibit true purring. ºôààÉùÊǼÒèËùÌØÓеķ¢ÒôÌØÕ÷¡£È»¶ø£¬ÔÚè¿Æ¶¯ÎïÖУ¬ÆäËûÖÖÀàÒ²»á·¢³öºôààÉù£¬Èç¶Ìβè¡¢ÁÔ±ª¡¢Å·ÑÇâ¦áû¡¢ÃÀÖÞʨºÍҰè¡£¾¡¹ÜÏñʨ×ÓÒ»ÀàµÄ´óÐÍè¿Æ¶¯ÎïÒ²»á·¢³öºôàà°ãµÄÉùÒô£¬Ñо¿È´±íÃ÷±ªÑǿƶ¯Î±ÈÈçʨ×Ó¡¢ÀÏ»¢¡¢ÃÀÖÞ±ª¡¢ÃÀÖÞ»¢¡¢Ñ©±ª¼°ÔƱª£¬²¢²»ÄÜ·¢³öÕæÕýµÄºôààÉù¡£
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What makes the purr distinctive from other cat vocalizations is that it is produced during the entire respiratory cycle (inhaling and exhaling). Other vocalizations such as the "meow" are limited to the expiration of the breath. ºôààÉùÓëè¿Æ¶¯ÎïµÄÆäËû·¢ÉùµÄ²»Í¬Ö®´¦ÔÚÓÚ£¬Ç°Õß²úÉúÓÚÕû¸öºôÎüÑ»·£¨°üÀ¨ÎüÆøºÍºôÆø£©¹ý³ÌÖУ»¶øÏñ¡°ß÷¡±ÕâÑùµÄÆäËû·¢ÉùÏÖÏó½öÔÚºôÆøµÄʱºò²úÉú¡£
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