DailyDirt: Are Animals Getting Smarter?
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
As people study animals in more depth, we’re finding out that animals may be smarter than previously thought. There might be some confirmation bias in some of these studies, since no one really looks for animals that are dumber. But it’s still fascinating to see complex animal behavior that suggests their cognitive abilities aren’t so different from humans. Here are a few examples of some interesting animal observations.
- Chimpanzees have been found with cultural differences, in that some groups of chimps have different nut cracking techniques than others. Chimps growing up using stones to crack open nuts know how to use other tools, but they just prefer using stones. And female chimps that join new chimp tribes adopt the social etiquette of their new peers. [url]
- Brain Storm is the name of a mouse that has been trained to go through fairly complex obstacle courses. Brain Storm wasn’t harmed or abused during his extensive training in mouse agility, but other pet mice have not been so lucky. [url]
- The numerical abilities of three American black bears have been studied — and it looks like bears know how to estimate small quantities. Bears could have similar mathematical skills as some primates, or maybe these researchers were working with relatives of Yogi the Bear who is, by all accounts, smarter than the average bear. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post.
Filed Under: american black bear, animals, brain storm, chimpanzees, intelligence, mice, smart animals
Comments on “DailyDirt: Are Animals Getting Smarter?”
I remember watching a show on squirrels. They could do an obstacle course and remember how to get past 24 obstacles in a row. Pretty impressive.
as smart as they need to be to survive
I remember reading years ago about the problem of designing food lockers for use in Yosemite National Park– the idea being that tourists could store their food in them, and bears would be unable to get them open. One ranger summed up the problem:
“There is considerable overlap between the intelligence of the smartest bears and the dumbest tourists.”
Re: as smart as they need to be to survive
Correction: now that I look it up, I find that it was garbage cans, not food lockers.
Re: Re: as smart as they need to be to survive
Yah, and bears have been known to destroy cars in order to get to the snacks people left on their front seats. Bears have a pretty good sense of smell, and food left in a hot car is like making microwave popcorn in your office cube….
The bear-proof garbage cans in the park seem to work okay now — I don’t know how many iterations it took, tho. 😛
Raccoons are the next evolution of sentient life on Earth...
I once got outsmarted by a raccoon… The furry fucker created a diversion and while I was checking out what was happening with my tent, he/she stole my bread and nearly ruined my dinner. I threw my axe at it. Missed. 🙁
They didn’t name the mouse Algernon?
For shame, research team. For shame.
I don’t care how well you know your way around an electron microscope, you must now turn in your Official Geek Membership Cards.
Meta: How do you...
…dismiss that new pop-up bar at the bottom of TD pages? There’s nothing on it that seems to function as a hide/down button…
Re: Meta: How do you...
You can disable it in your preferences:
http://www.techdirt.com/preferences.php
via this earlier explanation:
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120619/03360719380/nina-paley-explains-intellectual-disobedience.shtml#c181
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I don’t have an account here and I’m hardly going to get one just to remove this popup — that would be rewarding the annoyance and making it effective as a way to coerce people into signing up, and therefore against my principles.
While I can live with it, I should warn you that a lot of people nowadays surf using small devices — phones, and those new “netbook” laptops with wide but vertically-narrow screens. They often have quite low pixel resolutions, like 540 high for the netbooks and lower still for smartphones. On those, your fancy new popup probably covers a quarter of the screen and when you add in the browser title bar and address bar mobile users are peering at Techdirt through a keyhole now!
Re: Re: Re: Meta: How do you...
Addendum: an additional chunk of right-hand sidebar would work much better, since the problem is going to be worst on those wide-but-short netbook screens. As for phone users, their screens are even narrower than high and not high. I’d recommend, if you don’t do this already, serving recognized phone UAs a version of the page with no sidebars at all, just a header and then an article or articles. The stuff in this new popup could simply be stuck at the bottom of the page (rather than the bottom of the screen) (indeed, it could for every UA).
Re: Re: Re:2 Meta: How do you...
So much for average.
http://noscript.net/nsa/
Re: Re: Re:3 Meta: How do you...
What?
Re: Re: Re: Meta: How do you...
You don’t need an account as long as your cookies are enabled. Just try to use that preferences link without signing in and you’ll see.
The new toolbar actually takes up less space on an iPhone, but it makes the toolbar text a bit small for reading…. Not sure how it looks on an ultrabook screen.
Re: Re: Re:2 Meta: How do you...
I’m still not seeing here a justification for it not being inserted inline in the page, either in the right sidebar or at the bottom or in between an article and its comments. Nobody’s interested in “related articles” until they’ve gotten to the bottom of the current one, as a general rule…
Re: Re: Re:3 Meta: How do you...
Speaking of which, isn’t there already an “if you liked this post, you might also like…” in between an article and its comments? This new thing seems to be completely redundant with that.
Re: Meta: How do you...
get noscript, disable all 3rd party scripts by default, add in the safe sites you want to see. bingo, clutter free net.
“Smarter than previously thought” is not the same thing as “getting smarter”.
anyone who know anything about animal intelligence knows fully well that chimps are REALLY STUPID, dog’s and birds shit all over chimps on even the most simple of tasks
Human hubris
Our pre-conceptualizations are incorrect, based on two human misconceptions:
1. Animals are smarter than we realize, and
2. Humans are dumber than we realize.
“Are Animals Getting Smarter?”
No, humans are just getting dumber.
“What are we going to do today, Brain Storm?”
“Same thing we do every day: Try to take over the WORLD!!!”
Meta: How do you...
Is not that redundant if you believe in evolution, the best adapt the others go extinct, think of that bar as a test, how do you get rid of it?