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Sunday, August 26, 2012

Chimpanzee Genius





 Chimp

 Natasha, who appears in this photo, outperformed other chimps on tests given by researchers to measure intelligence.

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology/Esther Herrmann


Certain apes appear to be much smarter than others, with at  least one chimpanzee now characterized as being "exceptional" when  compared to other chimps.

The standout chimp, an adult female in her 20's named Natasha, scored  off the charts in a battery of tests. The findings, published in the  latest Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, suggest that geniuses exist among non-humans, but that no one attribute constitutes intelligence.

Instead, a perfect storm of abilities seems to come together to  create the Einsteins of the animal kingdom. Natasha's keepers at the  Ngamba Island chimpanzee sanctuary in Uganda knew she was special even  before the latest study.


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"The caretakers named Natasha as the smartest chimpanzee, precisely  the same chimpanzee that our tests had revealed to be exceptional,"  study authors Esther Herrmann and Josep Call of the Max Planck Institute  for Evolutionary Anthropology wrote.

"All three of the most experienced caretakers included Natasha in their lists (of the most intelligent chimps)," they added.

Natasha has made headlines over the months for her attention-grabbing  antics. For instance, she repeatedly escaped her former enclosure,  surrounded by an electric fence. She did this by tossing branches at the  fence until she didn't see a spark, letting her know that the power was  off.

She also learned how to tease humans, beckoning them to throw food her way, only to spray the unsuspecting person with water.

Herrmann and Call decided to study this chimp, along with numerous  others, to see if there really are chimp prodigies among non-human great  apes. To do this, the researchers created a multi-part mental challenge  consisting of eight tasks.

For the first task, the chimps had to find hidden find, testing their  spatial knowledge. For the second, the chimps wielded a tool --  avoiding a trap -- to again obtain a food reward. The remaining tasks  demonstrated understanding of things like color, size and shape.

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"We identified some individuals who consistently scored well across  (the) multiple tasks," wrote the authors, who again made note of  Natasha, who aced nearly every task.



The researchers could not identify "a general intelligence factor."  They instead indicate that ape intelligence might be a bundling of  skills related to learning, tool usage, understanding of quantities, and  an ability to reach conclusions based on evidence and reasoning.

As the saying goes, necessity may be the mother of invention and, at least in some cases, one reason behind chimp cleverness.

Call, for example, told Discovery News about chimps that make tools  for extracting termites out of mounds. The process requires several  steps.

"They uproot the stem or use their teeth to clip the stem at the base  and then remove the large leaf from the distal end by clipping it with  their teeth before transporting the stem to the termite nest, where they  complete tool manufacture by modifying the end into a 'paint brush' tip  by pulling the stem through their teeth, splitting the probe lengthwise  by pulling off strands of fiber, or separating the fibers by biting  them," he said.


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As for why only some chimps go through such an elaborate process, "a  lot depends on the ecological constraints and needs," he said.

In terms of other animals, Herrmann and Call mention the dogs Rico and Chaser, who knew the meaning of hundreds of words.

"Interestingly," the scientists point out, "all of these dogs  (considered to be very smart) are border collies. And many of their  owners reported that they did not train the dogs to play the fetching  game; it was the dogs who trained them!"

The jury is still out on what exactly constitutes such cleverness.  The researchers propose that more studies be conducted, with "tasks that  capture cognitive, motivational and temperament dimensions."

That's because, in part, a willingness to learn and a positive  attitude seem to make as big of a difference in dogs, chimps and other  animals as they do in humans.



        





Ape 'Genius' Smarter Than the Average Chimp : Discovery News

LINK:  http://news.discovery.com/animals/ape-genius-chimpanzee-intelligence-120826.html#mkcpgn=rssnws1






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