• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Ronan The Remarkable Beat-Keeping Sea Lion Has Better Rhythm Than Some Humans

May 1, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Remember Ronan the famous head-bopping sea lion? Well Oh my god, she’s back again [dun-na-na-nuh]. Brothers, sisters, everybody sing because since her early days of bopping along to the Backstreet Boys’ Everybody, Ronan’s talents have been verified in a recent study that declared her rhythm is better than that of some humans.

That’s a pretty big deal in the context that Ronan became the only non-human mammal known to demonstrate precise beat-keeping back in 2013, something a team of scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, (UCSC) were able to put to the test in getting her to nod along to music. She proved she could keep in time, and even adjust her head-bopping to match music she hadn’t heard before.

Don’t upset the rhythm

From the Backstreet Boys to Earth, Wind & Fire, Ronan had that beat locked down, but some questioned if her talents were really matching that of a human’s. So, a new study put Ronan head-to-head with Homo sapiens to find out, and the results were seriously impressive.

It takes a human, on average, 150 milliseconds to blink. I’m telling you this because Ronan proved herself capable of hitting the beat within an average range of 15 milliseconds, meaning she only varied by a tenth of an eyeblink from the beat.



Compared to the human students used in the study, she was more precise and more consistent at every tempo tested. When all the human and non-human study participants’ performances were compiled together and modeled to scale up for 10,000 humans doing the same study, they found that Ronan scored in the 99th percentile. Ladies and gentlemen, put your flippers together for Ronan the rhythmic sea lion.

Patterns in nature

While entertaining to us humans, the capacity to dance along to a banger is likely of little use to a wild sea lion. However, if we consider what rhythm involves, it starts to make more sense from an evolutionary perspective.

Nature is full of patterns, and animals who can understand them can often predict what’s going to happen next – an obviously extremely useful skill.

Dr Peter Cook

“Break it down and it’s: 1) Perceiving a regular pattern in time; 2) Making predictions about the next events in a sequence based on that pattern; and 3) Planning and executing a movement to match the occurrence of that event, based on the predicted timing, based on the pattern understanding,” said corresponding author Dr Peter Cook of New College Florida and UCSC’s Pinniped Lab to IFLScience. “If you think of it like that, there’s no end of circumstances where the ability might be helpful to wild animals.”

“For sea lions, just off the cuff, consider moving your flippers in time to waves while swimming, watching an undulating fish swim as you try to catch it and using its pattern of movement to predict where it’s going and when it will get there, or trying to interpose your own vocalizations between another sea lion’s incessant barking so you can be heard. Nature is full of patterns, and animals who can understand them can often predict what’s going to happen next – an obviously extremely useful skill.”

Where did Ronan the rhythmic sea lion come from?

Sea lions typically nurse for around nine months, so if they find themselves on their own before that age, they may not yet know how to hunt. This can result in some rather creative problem-solving, from begging on the beach to – as Cook says sometimes happens in San Francisco – wandering into town and entering restaurants.

Ronan was born in the wild, but it seems something must’ve happened to her mother as she was showing up on beaches and interacting with humans from a young age. Rehabilitation workers got her fat and healthy, but still she kept coming back.

Study co-authors (left to right) Andrew Rouse, Peter Cook, and Carson Hood posing for a picture with California sea lion Ronan

Study co-authors (left to right) Andrew Rouse, Peter Cook, and Carson Hood posing for a picture with California sea lion Ronan that this writer would very much like to have photo-bombed.

Image credit: Colleen Reichmuth. NMFS 23554.

“I was in graduate school at UC Santa Cruz, and was studying the neurobehavioral effects of a common algal toxin in sea lions in rehabilitation,” said Cook. “Ronan ended up being a ‘control’ animal in my study ([as she had] no signs of neurotoxic exposure). I kept her for two weeks of her rehab and ran her through a bunch of mazes. She then went back to rehab and was released, but she couldn’t thrive on her own and kept coming into contact with humans, so it was determined that she should go into managed care.”

It was at that time that The Pinniped Lab at UCSC’s Long Marine Lab (run by Colleen Reichmuth, who is senior author on the new study) were on the lookout for a new sea lion subject. “Because she was so young, adaptive, curious, and motivated, she was the perfect animal to try out beat-keeping with – something that, at that time, no non-human animal had been shown able to do,” said Cook.

The results, I think, speak for themselves. If you’ve ever dreamed of watching a sea lion bop to Boogie Wonderland, your dreams are about to come true ~30 seconds into the below video:



Sea lions as study participants

Ronan is now middle-aged by sea lion standards and after 12 years in research, she’s a dab hand at the scientific process. She’s participated in around 2,000 rhythm exercises (that, notably, only last a few seconds each with years-long gaps between them), but when it’s time to Science, she ain’t messing around.

“It’s anthropomorphic, but she’s a bit of a nerd,” said Cook. “She is very focused when trying new cognitive and perceptual and training tasks. Like all female sea lions I’ve worked with, she really likes to get the right answer. She is not satisfied on a task if she’s only getting it some of the time. She wants to figure out how things work, and maximally exploit the system.”

She would give me the sea lion side eye.

Dr Peter Cook

And like all seasoned professionals, she doesn’t tolerate delays.

“Whenever she got a wrong answer or was waiting to start bobbing while we ironed out some technical difficulty, she would give me the sea lion side eye,” Cook added. “They have enormous, globular eyes, and when they’re a little bit frustrated, they tend to make a very distinctive huff out through their nostrils and cock one big eye at whatever is bothering them. Whenever I heard the huff and saw the eye rotate over to [me], I knew we had to get things moving!”

I guess don’t teach an animal precise beat-keeping if you don’t want them to remind you that time’s a-ticking.

The study is published in the journal Scientific Reports.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Horizon Forbidden West release date, trailer, news and rumors
  2. Forge’s SPAC deal is a bet on unicorn illiquidity
  3. Why Wandering Albatrosses Get Divorced – New Research
  4. Telomeres Found To Encode Two Proteins, Potentially Transforming Cancer Research

Source Link: Ronan The Remarkable Beat-Keeping Sea Lion Has Better Rhythm Than Some Humans

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Man Broke Down Wall In His Basement And Discovered An Ancient Underground City That Once Housed 20,000 People
  • Same-Sex Penguin Couple Adopt And Raise Chick – And They’ve All Got 10/10 Names
  • Dolphins May Not “See” With Echolocation, But Instead “Feel” With It
  • Confirmed! Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Indeed An Interstellar Visitor, Quite Different From Its Predecessors
  • At 192, Jonathan – The Oldest Living Land Animal – Has Lived Through 40 US Presidents
  • 300,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools “Made By Denisovans” Discovered In China
  • Why Do Cats Eyes Glow? For The Same Reason Great White Sharks’ Do, Silly
  • G-astronomical News: Michelin-Starred Meal To Be Served On The ISS
  • In 2032, Earth May Witness A Once-In-5,000-Year Event On The Moon
  • Brand New Microscope Designed For Underwater Reveals Stunning Details Of Corals
  • The Atlantic’s Major Circulation Current Is Showing Worrying Signs, But Is Collapse Near?
  • “The Rings Held The Answer”: How We Finally Figured Out Saturn’s Day Length In 2019
  • Mystery Of Leonardo Da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man” Solved By A Dentist And A Protractor
  • Asteroid Ryugu’s Latest Mineral Is As Weird As Finding “A Tropical Seed In The Arctic”
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Are We Living Through A Sixth Mass Extinction?
  • Alien Abduction Or A Trick Of The Mind? A Down To Earth Explanation Of Close Encounters
  • Six Months Into Trump’s Presidency, Americans Report Record Low Pride In Being American
  • TikToker Unknowingly Handles Extremely Venomous Cone Snail And Lives To Tell The Tale
  • Scientists Sequence Oldest Egyptian DNA To Date, From A Whopping 4,800 Years Ago
  • “Uncharted Waters”: Large Hadron Collider Begins Colliding Oxygen For The First Time
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version