Read Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are? Online
Authors: Frans de Waal
human-raised, 152
and imitation, 151–56, 161
intelligence in, 68
intentionality in, 68
interspecies interaction of, 141–42
kissing, 24–25,
24
, 26
and mirrors, 49–50
new games invented by, 154–55
new patterns from preexisting knowledge, 68
planning by, 216
responses to death, 106
and self-control, 228
social abilities of, 141, 142
and theory of mind, 146
as thinking beings, 87
tickling, 25
tools fabricated by, 76–87,
77
tool use by, 76, 81, 126–27
Wernicke’s area of the brain in, 109
aphasia, 112
archerfish, 12
Archimedes, 64–65
arctoidea
family, 32
Are You as Stupid as a Chimpanzee?
(BBC), 127
Aristotle, 249
scala naturae,
12, 13, 22
armadillos, 75
arthropods, 252
Asimov, Isaac, 2
attention, 34, 150
auditory cortex, 11
Ayumu (chimpanzee), 119–20,
120
, 121, 127–28, 129, 134, 152, 161
Babb, Stephanie, 211
baboons, social relationships in, 169, 177
Baerends, Gerard, 39, 56
Bailey (dolphin), 263
bats:
auditory cortex of, 11
echolocation of, 10, 75
Umwelt
of, 9–11
wings of,
74
Beach, Frank, 57
Beck, Benjamin, 14–15, 78, 265
beewolves (digger wasps), 38, 62, 69
behavioral diversity, 51
behavioral evolution, 45
behaviorism, 30–31, 32, 33, 56–58, 238, 271, 319
decline of, 55
and ethology, 36–37, 41, 44
expectation in, 207
operant conditioning, 31, 36, 37, 99
and purposiveness, 207
rewards in, 207, 256, 257
and Skinner, 49,
50
, 266
stimulus-response, 42, 154
behaviorists, as psychologists, 39
behaviors:
analogous, 75
inhibitions in, 222–23
innate, 40, 56
naturalistic, 174
purposeful, 213–15,
214
species-typical, 39–40, 60
spontaneous, 37–38
structure of, 39, 175
survival value of, 44
Bekoff, Marc, 266
Beran, Michael, 227–29
Betty (crow), 89–90
Bierens de Haan, Johan, 43–44
Bimba (chimpanzee), 186
BIOL (Bonding- and Identification-based Observational Learning), 155, 259, 319
Biologically prepared learning,
see
learning, biologically prepared
biology:
function vs. mechanism in, 73–74
utilitarian view of, 267
bipedalism, 120–21
birds:
brain studies of, 115, 267
food caching by, 98, 217–18, 225
intelligence of, 98–99
memory of, 211
and mirror image, 242, 244
referential signaling by, 108
self-restraint in, 225
theory of mind in, 146–48,
147
toolmaking by, 90
wings of, 75
birdsong:
duplicating behavior, 151
FoxP2 gene in, 109
body language, 131–32
body movements, imitation of, 159
Boesch, Christopher, 191, 192
bonobos:
bipedalism in, 120–21
future planning by, 216
in Hominoid family, 80–81, 120
and language, 110–11
and missing link, 161
problem solving by, 84
purposeful behavior in, 213–15,
214
sexuality of, 218
tool use by, 176
Borie (chimpanzee), 50, 194
Bovet, Dalila, 183
Boysen, Sarah, 228–29
brachiators, 14
brain:
and consciousness, 123–24
and future planning, 220–21
interconnectivity in, 123
and mental powers, 160
mirror neurons in, 159
neuron count in, 124, 160
primate expansion of, 176
sizes of, 123–24, 248, 267
brain studies, 114–15,
116
, 117, 121, 267
Breuer, Thomas, 81
Brosnan, Sarah, 197, 227
Browning, Robert, 205
Bruck, Jason, 263
Bshary, Redouan, 198–200
Budongo Forest, Uganda, 180
Bugnyar, Thomas, 147–48
Bula (chimpanzee), 186
Burgers’ Zoo, Arnhem:
chimpanzee studies in, 53, 134, 167, 170–71, 175,
188
Great Escape from, 67
Burghardt, Gordon, 26
Bushmen, 79–80
Call, Josep, 54, 216
Callie (dog), 115–17,
116
Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness, The,
233–34
camouflage, 250–51
capuchin monkeys:
coalitions formed by, 178–79,
179
conformism in, 253–54
cooperation among, 186, 197
delayed gratification in, 224–25
face recognition in, 70–71, 129
headflagging by, 179–80
lab for, 59
and mirror image, 243
perspective taking by, 135, 138
reciprocity among, 175
and theory of mind, 138
tool use by, 82–86,
85
trial-and-error learning by, 84
Carpenter, Ray, 61
Cartesian view of animals, 4
Cashew (cat), 212
cats:
inhibitions in, 222
Köpfchengeben
of, 21
and “law of effect,” 20–21,
20
punishment for behavior of, 56–57
cephalopods, 246, 252
cerebellum, 124, 160
Cheney, Dick, 72
Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, China, 32
chest beating, 127
Chester Zoo, UK, 219
Chimpanzee Politics
(de Waal), 168–69, 171, 175–76
chimpanzees:
affordances learned by, 68, 69
alliance formation by, 162, 171–72, 219
altruism of, 67–68
complex cognition of, 43
computer game competitions of, 161–62, 170
conflict resolution in, 184–85, 193, 195
conformism among, 252–57, 258, 259
conspecific approach in research with, 153–54
cooperation among, 187, 188–89,
188
, 191, 193–95, 197–98, 200
delayed gratification in, 225
and emotions, 106
empathy in, 133
face recognition in, 18–19, 70, 75, 260–61
floating peanut task, 91–92
food deprivation tested on, 36
generosity of, 256
ghost box test of, 159
grapefruit experiment with, 53–54, 62
grooming of, 155, 257
hand gestures of, 108–9
haptic (touch) discrimination of, 34
HIV-1 resistance in, 161
in Hominoid family, 80–81, 120
insight in, 64,
64
, 65
intentional signaling in, 137–38
kissing, 24–25,
24
, 171
in lab settings, 142–43, 146
logic sought by, 54–55
memory in, 119–20,
120
, 207–10
and mirror test, 48–50
and missing link, 161
perspective taking by, 136, 138–40, 148–49
political strategies of, 68, 172–73
problem solving by, 67–68, 84, 86, 87
reconciliation after fights, 174, 175
reputation of, 195
rivalries in, 162
self-awareness of, 48–50
and sexuality, 218, 221–22
social hierarchies, 168, 219, 221–22
social learning in, 155
social skills of, 165–74, 185, 218
status of, 162
stimulus equivalence in, 182–83
targeted helping by, 134
theory of mind in, 130–31, 146
toolkits of, 79, 87, 217
tool use by, 14, 63–64,
64
, 77–80,
77
, 81, 82, 84, 127, 257
traveling parties of, 172
trial-and-error learning by, 68
vocalizations by, 172, 180–81
in the wild vs. zoo-bred, 171, 173
Chimpita (chimpanzee), 111–12
“chimpocentrism,” 162
Chomsky, Noam, 99
cichlids, 39, 74
civilization, 151
Clark’s nutcrackers, 12, 69
Clay, Zanna, 214
Clayton, Nicky, 146–47, 211, 217
Clever Hans (horse), 45–48,
46
, 53, 60, 109, 141, 144
Clever Hans Effect, 47–48, 109, 111, 141, 319
coalition formation, 167, 171, 178–79,
179
cognition, 319
animal and human, 5, 121, 157, 268
attention and motivation required in, 150
and brain size, 123–24
comparative, 27
complex, 43
embodied, 159–60, 320
evolutionary,
see
evolutionary cognition
function vs. mechanism in, 73–74, 158
and language, 102
and learning, 69, 271
and perception, 238
of primates, 11–12
pure, 271
representational mental strategy, 86–87
research on, 13, 34, 45–48, 59, 163, 265, 269–70, 272–73
ripple effects of, 69–70, 75–76, 93, 94, 108, 136, 320
social, 156
unitary theory sought in, 158
use of term, 10–11, 69
cognitive ethology, 26–27, 266, 319
cognitive evolution, 12, 21–22, 252
cognitive maps, 206
cognitive ripple rule,
see
cognition, ripple effects of; ripple effects
Columbia Obstruction Method, 35
common ancestor, 161
communication:
geared to audience, 109–10
hand gestures, 108–9, 111
human skills in, 106
innate skills of, 108
interpretation of, 110
language,
see
language
nonverbal signals in, 106, 112, 131–32
unawareness of, 48
vocalizations, 172, 177, 178, 180–81, 262
comparability, 192
comparative psychology, 27, 28, 56, 58, 61, 271, 320
conditioning, 21
conflict resolution, 184–85, 193, 195
conformism, 252–59
conformist bias, 252, 253, 255, 259, 320
consciousness, 23, 123–24, 206, 228, 229, 233–34
conspecific approach, 152–54, 156, 159, 320
continuity, 124, 126, 221, 269, 274
convergent evolution, 74, 75, 83, 93, 109, 274, 319, 320
cooperation, 176, 186–201,
188
fishing cooperatives, 195–96
between ocean species, 198–200,
198
organization and scale, 196–97
cooperative pulling paradigm, 186–90, 192, 320
Copernicus, 268
cormorants, 226
corvids, 71–72, 92–93, 98, 136, 146–47,
147
, 156, 244
courting, 21
coyotes, 75
crab-eating (long-tailed) macaques, 88
Crawford, Meredith, 186, 192
critical anthropomorphism, 26, 320
crocodiles, 94
Crow and the Pitcher, The
(Aesop), 90–91,
90
crows:
complex cognition of, 43
face recognition in, 71–72
food caching by, 98
tool use by, 89–90,
90
, 91, 93, 270, 274
Crystal, Jonathon, 211
Cullen, Esther, 31
cultural learning, 152–53
cultural transmission, 156
cultural variability, 268
culture, 48, 51, 52, 151–52, 153, 175, 253, 268, 320
Curmudgeon (capuchin monkey), 180
cuttlefish, 251–52
Dandy (chimpanzee), 62
Darwin, Charles, 1, 124, 158
on animal emotions, 4, 41, 96, 114
on continuity, 221, 269
and natural selection, 122, 123
Darwin-Wallace Theory, 122–23
death, 106
delayed gratification, 224–29, 320
Dickinson, Anthony, 211
digger wasps, 38, 62, 69
Dijkgraaf, Sven, 10
Diogenes, 125
displacement activity, 37, 226–29, 320
DNA studies, 120, 121
dognition, 114
dogs:
behaviors of, 30–31, 152
brain studies on, 115–17,
116
domestication of, 114, 149–50, 156
eye contact with, 150
imitation in, 156
and mirror test, 242
punishment for behavior of, 56–57
restraint in, 222
wild, 191
and wolves compared, 149–50, 156
dolphins:
brain size of, 123, 248
communication with, 99, 260
cooperation among, 189, 196
empathy in, 132
imitation in, 156
individual recognition by, 261–63
memory in, 263
self-recognition in, 243–44
shapes of, 75
signature whistles of, 262
targeted helping by, 133–34,
133
uncertainty response in, 230, 232
dual-gender signaling, 252
Dücker, Gerti, 245
ducklings, 32–33
Dunbar, Robin, 176
Eba (macaque), 52
echolocation, 10, 11, 12, 22, 75
ecological niche, 8, 320
Elephant Conservation Center, Thailand, 189
elephants:
brain size of, 123
complex cognition of, 43
cooperation between, 186, 189–90
embodied cognition in, 159–60
empathy in, 132
future orientation in, 205
listening, 237–40
mirror tests of, 17–18, 157, 235–36,
236
neurons in brain of, 124, 160
politics among, 201–3
self-recognition in, 243
tool use by, 15,
16
trunks of, 15
Umwelt
of, 237
Eli (dog), 115–16, 117
Embodied cognition,
see
cognition, embodied
Emery, Nathan, 147
emotions, 41, 45, 96, 106, 114, 273
empathic perspective taking, 132–40
empathy, 61, 132–33, 176, 275
Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness (EEA), 45
episodic memory, 207–12, 229, 320
equivalence learning, 183
Estosha National Park, Namibia, 202
ethnic triumphalism, 127