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BY ROBERT S. BOYD FREE PRESS WASHINGTON STAFF
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ANIMALS
HAVE WILD WAYS OF GRASPING THEIR WORLD
Problem solving: Harvard researchers tested a monkey's
ability to get food that was outside its cage. The
food was placed on a piece of cloth. The monkey usually
figured out on the first try to pull the cloth to
get the food.
Tool
use: To crack nuts, chimpanzees put a shell on a flat
rock and hammered it open with a stone. Like Stone
Age humans, one chimp was observed chipping a rock
to form a sharp edge.
Self-awareness:
Penny Patterson, an animal psychologist at Santa Clara
University in California, has trained Koko, a female
gorilla, to use sign language to express herself.
And unlike most animals, Koko's been taught to recognize
herself in a mirror. When she sees herself, the 300-pound
gorilla makes the signs for "Me, Koko."
Communication:
Scientists at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff
said prairie dogs have a sophisticated warning system.
They make an alarm call that tells whether an approaching
predator is a human, a coyote or a dog, as well as
its size and travel speed.
Language:
At her Atlanta Language Research Center, Sue Savage-Rumbaugh
has taught Kanzi, a bonobo, to communicate with humans
by pointing to printed symbols on a keyboard.
By
Robert S. Boyd, Free Press Washington staff
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WASHINGTON
-- Dog owners know their pets recognize words like "bone"
and "walk" and "go for a ride." Cat
owners brag about how fast their kitties learn to use the
litter box -- or where their cat treats are kept.
But
scientists are discovering that animals are even smarter
than even the most dedicated pet-lover may have imagined.
In a
flurry of recent books and research papers, scientists report
that some animals have gone far beyond understanding human
language. They can perform simple arithmetic, form mental
maps of their environment, exchange elaborate messages with
each other, master intricate social relationships, as well
as create tools and teach other animals to use them.
A few
animal whiz kids even demonstrate a rudimentary self-awareness
and can handle abstract concepts, such as whether things
are the same or different -- intellectual capacities previously
thought to be limited to human beings.
"We
share the planet with thinking animals," Harvard neuroscientist
Marc Hauser writes in his new book, "Wild Minds."
"Insights
from evolutionary theory and cognitive science have begun
to revolutionize our understanding of animal minds."
The
brainiest animals are chimpanzees, which share 99 percent
of human DNA and can be taught an elementary form of human
language. Next come talking birds, whose ability to make
intelligible sounds opens a window into the nonhuman brain
that no other species provides.
Many
other species, including dolphins, whales, elephants and
crows, also exhibit intelligent behavior but have not been
studied as intensively as apes and talking birds.
Irene
Pepperberg, a biologist at the University of Arizona in
Tucson, has trained a parrot named Alex to name, request
or refuse more than 100 objects. She said Alex now understands
such abstract concepts as similarity and difference, color
and quantity.
Pepperberg
calls Alex an "avian Einstein." Alex knows his
numbers up to six, she said. When he is shown five keys
or corks and is asked, "How many?" he answers
"Five." He also can combine the notions of color
and number, answering correctly when asked, "How many
blue key?"
Alex
has "changed our perception of the term 'birdbrain,'
" Pepperberg said.
Scientists
acknowledge that there is an enormous gulf between human
and animal mental capacities, and animal researchers compare
their subjects to human babies -- not to adults.
According
to Hauser, some adult monkeys are at least as talented as
a 1-year-old human when it comes to counting objects. Like
a human infant, rhesus monkeys appear to understand that
one plus one equals two, two plus one equals three, two
minus one equals one and three minus one equals two. But,
also like babies, they failed to understand that two plus
two equals four.
Before
the new wave of research, it was considered "scientifically
unsound to even contemplate whether animals think,"
Australian animal psychologist Lesley Rogers said. "Attributing
humanlike characteristics to animals exposed scientists
to ridicule."
Researcher
Sue Savage-Rumbaugh said: "Many people make fun of
what I do." Savage-Rumbaugh teaches chimpanzees to
understand elementary English at Georgia State University's
Language Research Center in Atlanta. "But I live with
these animals every day. We have to learn to listen to them.
They don't have a vocal tract. They can't speak. But they
can comprehend very much the way we do."
According
to Donald Griffin, a Harvard zoologist and pioneer in animal
brain research, there has been "a subtle shift on the
part of scientists from asserting that animals do not think
at all to the view that their thoughts are very different
from ours."
Bea
Van Kampen, an animal behaviorist and owner of Animal Manors
Plus in Williamston, near Lansing, said she wasn't surprised
by the recent studies and said she expects future research
will show that animals are even smarter than scientists
now believe.
"At
times people say. 'Oh, it's just an animal.' They think
that the human species is more superior to animals,"
said Van Kampen, who will teach animal behaviorism at Michigan
State University beginning in March.
"If
you measure it on intelligence, then they are correct,"
she said. "But although it is not the same level, it
is intelligence."
Some
experts, however, remain reluctant to use the words "think"
or "intelligence" in connection with animals,
because the terms are vague and frequently misunderstood.
Hauser,
for example, prefers to talk about "mental tools."
He describes a "universal mental tool kit that provides
animals with a basic capacity to recognize objects, count
and navigate."
Researchers
attribute their new appreciation of animal intelligence
to recent developments in cognitive psychology, infant development
and neuroscience. For example, positron emission tomography
-- or PET -- scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
reveal similar patterns of electrical activity in human
and animal brains. PET scans show the chemical functioning
of tissue and organs, and MRI reveals the structure of organs.
Advances
in computer science, particularly in the fields of artificial
intelligence and machine learning, also indicate that mental
skills -- such as playing championship chess -- are not
limited to human beings.
In his
book "Animal Minds," Griffin asserts that the
"levels and types of intelligence in nonhumans form
a continuum with those of humans."
Rogers
agreed, saying: "It is possible that we humans are
just another step in the continuity of the evolution of
mind."
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