thumb|361x361px|A pair of Clouded Leopard|clouded leopards, one of the four felid species that use prusten to communicate. Prusten is a form of communicative behaviour exhibited by some members of the family Felidae. Prusten is also referred to as chuffing (noun) or chuffle (verb). It is described as a short, low intensity, non-threatening vocalization. In order to vocalize a chuff, the animal's mouth is closed and air is blown through the nostrils, producing a breathy snort. It is typically accompanied by a head bobbing movement. It is often used between two cats as a greeting, during courtsh
thumb|361x361px|A pair of Clouded Leopard|clouded leopards, one of the four felid species that use prusten to communicate. Prusten is a form of communicative behaviour exhibited by some members of the family Felidae. Prusten is also referred to as chuffing (noun) or chuffle (verb). It is described as a short, low intensity, non-threatening vocalization. In order to vocalize a chuff, the animal's mouth is closed and air is blown through the nostrils, producing a breathy snort. It is typically accompanied by a head bobbing movement. It is often used between two cats as a greeting, during courtship, or by a mother comforting her cubs. The vocalization is produced by tigers, jaguars, snow leopards, clouded leopards and even polar bears. Prusten has significance in both the fields of evolution and conservation.
== Mechanism == In tigers, it has been found that low-pitched vocalizations, such as prusten, originate from vibrations of thick vocal folds in the larynx of the cat. Sound production is facilitated by the low threshold pressure required to oscillate the vocal folds, and low glottal resistance. The rough-sounding quality of the low-pitched vocalizations is likely generated by the complex pattern of vocal vibrations, caused by the excitation of multiple modes of oscillation simultaneously. Prusten also involves air being exhaled through the nose at the same time as through the mouth. This may represent an evolutionary shift from exclusively laryngeal vocalizations to mixed nasal and laryngeal sound production in the felid species that display the behaviour.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).