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<text id=93TT1250>
<link 93TO0091>
<title>
Mar. 22, 1993: Can Animals Think?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORY, Page 54
Can Animals Think?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>After years of debate, ingenious new studies of dolphins, apes
and other brainy beasts are convincing many scientists that
the answer is yes
</p>
<p>By EUGENE LINDEN
</p>
<p> In a sun-dappled pool not far from the clamor of Waikiki
Beach, two female dolphins poke their heads out of the water,
waiting for a command. "O.K.," says Louis Herman, founder and
director of the Kewalo Basin Marine Mammal Laboratory, "now
let's try a tandem creative." Two graduate students, positioned
at opposite ends of the 50-ft. tank, throw full body and soul
into communicating this message to the animals, Phoenix and
Akeakamai. First the humans ask the dolphins to pay attention
by holding a finger high in the air. Then they tap the index
fingers of each hand together, forming the gesture that has been
taught to mean tandem. Next they throw their arms up in an
expansive gesture that signifies creative. The dolphins have
just been told, "Do something creative together.''
</p>
<p> The dolphins break away from their trainers and submerge
in the 6-ft.-deep water, where they can be seen circling until
they begin to swim in tandem. Once they are in synch, the
animals leap into the air and simultaneously spit out jets of
water before plunging back into the pool. The trainers flash
huge smiles at their flippered pupils and applaud wildly. The
animals also seem delighted and squeak with pleasure.
</p>
<p> What is going on here? Do the dolphins actually understand
the command tandem creative as a request to make some joint
artistic statement through movement? Did they communicate in
some fashion to choose a routine and coordinate their movements?
In order to spit, for instance, they both must take water into
their mouths before they leap into the air--a trick that takes
some forethought. Other requests for tandem creatives have
yielded a variety of results, including a synchronized backward
swim culminating in a simultaneous wave of the tails. Or could
it be that these routines are nothing more than one dolphin
very closely following the lead of another? In the wild, after
all, dolphins are extraordinarily skilled at tuning their
actions to the movements of others in their group.
</p>
<p> In cluttered quarters at the University of Arizona--half
lab, half toy-strewn nursery--Alex, the voluble African gray
parrot, is, as usual, commenting on all he sees. "Hot!" he warns
in a sweet, childlike voice, as a visitor picks up a mug of
tea. Alex spots a plateful of fruit and announces his choice:
"Grape."
</p>
<p> Everyone knows parrots can talk, but for the past 15
years, ethologist Irene Pepperberg has been working with Alex,
exploring the degree to which the birds understand what they are
saying. Pepperberg picks up an object from a crowded tray and
inquires, "What toy?" Alex promptly answers, "Block." He then
responds to questions about the plaything, describing its color,
shape, what it is made of ("wood") and whether it is bigger or
smaller than other objects on the tray.
</p>
<p> Something less than true creativity may account for the
dolphin flights of fancy seen at Kewalo Basin, but something
more than simple mimicry seems to be at work in the case of this
1-lb. bird.
</p>
<p> Alex also uses English to communicate what appears to be
his feelings. After incorrectly answering how many rose-colored
pieces of wool are mixed in with other objects on the tray, he
says, "I'm sorry." A moment later the obviously frustrated bird
says, "I'm gonna go away" and turns his feathered back on the
offending tray. Does Alex know what he is saying, or is "I'm
gonna go away" merely a collection of sounds he emits when
frustrated?
</p>
<p> Since antiquity, philosophers have argued that higher
mental abilities--in short, thinking and language--are the
great divide separating humans from other species. The lesser
creatures, Rene Descartes contended in 1637, are little more
than automatons, sleepwalking through life without a mote of
self-awareness. The French thinker found it inconceivable that
an animal might have the ability to "use words or signs, putting
them together as we do." Charles Darwin delivered an unsettling
blow to this doctrine a century ago when he asserted that humans
were linked by common ancestry to the rest of the animal
kingdom. Darwinism raised a series of tantalizing questions for
future generations: If other vertebrates are similar to humans
in blood and bone, should they not share other characteristics,
including intelligence? More specifically, did the earliest
humanlike creatures, who split from the ancestors they shared
with apes between 5 million and 7 million years ago, already
possess a primitive ability to form plans, manipulate symbols,
plot mischief and express sentiments?
</p>
<p> Even to raise these questions challenges humanity's belief
that it occupies an exalted place in the universe. Moreover,
scientists have historic reasons to be skeptical of claims
concerning animal intelligence. At the turn of the century, a
wonder horse named Clever Hans wowed Europeans with his apparent
ability to solve math problems, expressing his answers by
tapping a hoof. Dutch psychologist Oskar Pfungst ultimately
showed that Hans was merely responding to inadvertent cues from
his human handlers, who, for instance, would visibly relax when
the horse had tapped the proper number of times. When
blindfolded by Pfungst, Hans ceased to be so clever.
</p>
<p> Not surprisingly, then, accounts of the first language
experiments with apes in the 1970s produced one of the most
fractious debates in the history of the behavioral sciences.
Washoe the chimp and Koko the gorilla became famous for their
linguistic feats using sign language, but scientists argued
bitterly over the significance. Did the "speech" of these
animals reflect a genuine ability to think symbolically and
communicate thought, or was it largely the result of rote
conditioning or of cuing--a la Hans--by trainers? Skepticism
carried the day, and researchers who had dedicated their lives
to working with the apes saw their work dismissed as a mere
curiosity. So chilly was the climate that many young researchers
left the field.
</p>
<p> But the skepticism also served as a challenge. A number of
scientists launched innovative probes of animal intelligence,
while those who remained in language work designed careful
experiments to meet the objections of critics. Their aim is to
determine, as precisely as possible, what animals know and how
well they can communicate it. The result is that animals are
once again talking up a storm, as well as demonstrating other
intellectual skills. Most scientists now take seriously the
flood of new evidence suggesting that other species share with
humans some higher mental abilities.
</p>
<p> The Lessons of Kanzi
</p>
<p> No animal has done more to renew interest in animal
intelligence than a beguiling, bilingual bonobo named Kanzi, who
has the grammatical abilities of a 2 1/2-year-old child and a
taste for movies about cavemen. The 12-year-old pygmy chimpanzee
lives with a colony of other apes in a cage complex on the
wooded campus of the Georgia State University Language Research
Center, near Atlanta. Under the tutelage of psychologist Sue
Savage-Rumbaugh, he makes his desires known either by pointing
to symbols printed on a laminated board or by punching the
symbols on a special keyboard that then generates the words in
English. While Kanzi cannot speak (apes lack the vocal control
to form words), he understands spoken language.
</p>
<p> In the time-honored fashion of ambitious young interns,
Kanzi became involved in language experiments by catching the
boss's eye. Savage-Rumbaugh noticed that the young ape was
learning words she was struggling to teach his mother Matata.
The language was a system of abstract visual symbols developed
by Savage-Rumbaugh's husband Duane Rumbaugh during his first
language experiments with chimpanzees. "If Kanzi could learn
without instruction, I wondered, Why teach?" says
Savage-Rumbaugh. From then on, Kanzi learned language much the
way human children do: by going through the ordinary activities
of his day while humans spoke in English and pointed to the
appropriate lexigrams on the portable boards.
</p>
<p> Kanzi soon began using the lexigrams as a means of
communication, requesting games, treats and activities.
Eventually he learned to combine two or more symbols to convey
his desires. When, for instance, he wanted to watch a favorite
movie, Quest for Fire, he would ask for "Fire TV" (Kanzi also
adores Greystoke, a Tarzan movie).
</p>
<p> Kanzi's most noteworthy achievement has been to
demonstrate a grasp of grammatical concepts such as word order.
Savage-Rumbaugh and psychologist Rose Sevcik created an extended
experiment to compare the ape with a two-year-old girl named
Alia in responding to commands expressed in 660 spoken English
sentences. The sentences combined objects in ways that Kanzi and
Alia were unlikely to have encountered before: "Put the melon
in the potty," or "Go get the carrot that's in the microwave."
</p>
<p> Through most of the experiment, Kanzi and Alia were neck
and neck. At the end, however, Alia's language skills began to
outpace the bonobo's, while Kanzi's grammatical comprehension
topped out at the level of a 2 1/2-year-old. Though not
impressive by human standards, even that toddler level implies
vastly more sophisticated abilities than critics have
acknowledged.
</p>
<p> In truth, Kanzi's achievements are no greater than those
claimed for Koko or other subjects in early language studies.
His real significance is that scientists are more willing to
accept the results as valid because of the tight controls used
during the studies. For instance, a one-way mirror prevented
Kanzi and Alia from seeing who gave them commands, while those
tracking what the ape and toddler did in response wore earphones
to prevent them from hearing the requests. Each sentence was
also utterly new to both ape and child. The young bonobo has
thus helped break a two-decade deadlock during which language
experimentation with animals was paralyzed by concerns that the
animals were responding to cues from their trainers rather than
demonstrating true abstract abilities.
</p>
<p> The Knowledge of Dolphins
</p>
<p> It is not terribly surprising that apes, humanity's
closest relatives, might possess some measure of smarts. But is
it possible that more distantly related species might also have
some capacity for symbolic communication? Herman offers a
partial answer through his work with dolphins, animals whose
ancestors diverged from other mammals' more than 45 million
years ago.
</p>
<p> Communication between humans and dolphins at Kewalo Basin
occurs mostly through a gestural language that borrows some
words from American Sign Language. The trainers make the
gestures with big, enthusiastic arm movements, asking Phoenix
or Akeakamai to follow such commands as "person left Frisbee
fetch," which means "bring the Frisbee on the left to the person
in the pool," or "surfboard person fetch," in which Akeakamai
gently pushes a human volunteer over to the surfboard.
</p>
<p> Such requests probe the dolphin's understanding of word
order in ways somewhat analogous to the work with Kanzi. Herman
insists that the dolphin's grammatical competence is at least
as sophisticated as Kanzi's. Herman's group has also determined
that dolphins can form a generalized concept about an object:
they respond correctly to commands involving a hoop, no matter
whether the hoop is round, octagonal or square. They also seem
to retain a mental image of an object whether or not it is
present in their environment. Thus they can accurately report
whether a ball or hoop is in the pool (by touching their snouts
to YES and NO paddles placed in the water).
</p>
<p> The dolphins have a better attitude toward their schooling
than many children. When correct, they squeak excitedly as they
race back to the trainer. When wrong, they sag noticeably and
look about as depressed as it is possible for these benign
creatures to look. Herman notes that they are not above
resorting to tricks familiar to every student, such as rushing
over to another object after choosing the wrong one, or
positioning themselves at some ambiguous midpoint between two
choices with the apparent hope that the trainer will say
"Right!" On occasion, when wrong, they will take their chagrin
out on the object and beat a hoop or basket as though it were
at fault.
</p>
<p> But Do the Animals Really Understand?
</p>
<p> Because of their big brains, genial smiles and noble
foreheads, dolphins have long attracted human champions quite
willing to credit the marine mammals with all sorts of higher
mental abilities. To a hard-nosed scientist, however, the noble
forehead is a housing for sonar gear, the upturned smile is an
adaptation that makes it easier for the animal to scoop up fish,
and it is open to question for what purposes the animal uses its
large brain. Herman and others working with animals have been
criticized for using linguistic terms like word or syntax when
some cruder system may describe what is occurring in a dolphin's
head.
</p>
<p> Unfortunately, it is impossible to know precisely what
goes on in another creature's mind and to what degree it
understands the languages it uses. Take the case of the gorilla
Koko, first taught 20 years ago to use American Sign Language
by psychologist Penny Patterson. On one much discussed occasion,
the powerful gorilla had inadvertently knocked a sink off its
moorings in her living quarters. Koko signed the words "Kate
there bad," pointing to the sink. Was the muscular animal
trying, rather implausibly, to shift the blame to one of
Patterson's slightly built female assistants? Or was she merely
making signs vaguely associated with the event? Sixteen years
later, there is still no definitive answer.
</p>
<p> For his part, Herman admits that his dolphins are a long
way from humans in their use of language. But he vehemently
insists that they do have a conceptual grasp of the words they
learn. "If you accept that semantics and syntax are core
attributes of human language," says Herman, "then we have shown
that the dolphins also account for these two features within the
limits of this language."
</p>
<p> Some scientists, particularly those from the behaviorist
school of psychology, take a more skeptical view. What looks
like language, they say, may be simply mimicry or rote learning.
One of Herman's critics, animal behaviorist Ronald Schusterman,
insists that before anyone can say an animal is speaking, they
had better determine whether the beast is capable of the kind
of abstract thinking that forms the basis of speech. "My
argument is that the language experiments have moved too fast,"
says Schusterman. "They have not looked at some fundamental
cognitive abilities that give rise to linguistic abilities." At
Long Marine Laboratory in Santa Cruz, California, Schusterman
has been trying to fill that gap.
</p>
<p> Games of Logic with Sea Lions
</p>
<p> Unlike the sunny-dispositioned dolphins, sea lions radiate
intensity. Schusterman chose them for his research because they
are easily trained. He did not attempt to teach seven-year-old
Rio a language. Instead, he wanted to determine if the female
sea lion could understand logical relationships between symbols
presented on poster boards. For instance, by rewarding the sea
lion selectively, trainers taught Rio that a symbol looking like
a mug was equivalent to one that looked like a watch. Then she
was taught that the watch symbol was equivalent to a third
symbol that looked like a bomb. The question was whether she
could make the jump to understanding that the mug was therefore
equivalent to a bomb.
</p>
<p> Schusterman devised an elaborate procedure to ensure
against cuing: signals to Rio were delivered by a trainer who
did not know the correct answer. Rio would start the test by
choosing one of two randomly selected symbols on a
scoreboard-like apparatus next to her tank. She would then be
presented with two new icons and asked to pick which one was
logically equivalent to the symbol she had chosen earlier.
</p>
<p> Unlike dolphins, sea lions seem to treat training as if it
were a life-or-death matter. At the start of each session Rio
rivets her stare on her trainers. When wrong, she barks in
frustration. But on one particular day she had little to
complain about, answering correctly 24 out of 28 times.
Schusterman takes this performance as proof that the animal has
at least some of the cognitive skills required for language.
Thus, he says, it is now much easier for him to accept that
bigger-brained dolphins and apes understand and manipulate their
vocabularies symbolically as well.
</p>
<p> Words of Love from a Parrot
</p>
<p> If the animal-language experiments had an awards dinner,
the prize for best accent would go to the befeathered Alex. The
parrot acquired his Midwestern accent from his mentor,
Pepperberg. She became intrigued by the language work with great
apes in the 1970s and decided to examine the abilities of an
animal with an entirely different brain structure. She chose
parrots in part because they can actually talk and because
studies had established that the birds could perform as well as
chimps on some psychological tests, suggesting that brain size
is not the only determinant of mental ability.
</p>
<p> Like Kanzi, Alex learned his vocabulary in a social
setting, though the approach was more contrived. Pepperberg
would, for instance, show a student a cork (one of Alex's
favorite objects). If the student said the word cork, Pepperberg
would give it to her; but when another word was used, the
student would be scolded. Alex quickly got the drift of this
game, and over the years has acquired more than 71 labels
denoting objects, actions, colors, shapes and materials. Apart
from answering several different questions about the same
object, Alex also seems to understand quantity. Most
impressively, he can look at an assortment of objects on a tray
and say how many pieces of green wool or how many blue blocks
lie amid the clutter.
</p>
<p> At some level, Alex apparently understands language as a
social interaction and uses it to maintain contact and get
attention. "The way Alex uses English does not necessarily have
all the aspects of language," says Pepperberg, "but it provides
a two-way communication system that allows me to explore the way
he thinks." At times his choice of words is touchingly apt, even
if he uses phrases to get results rather than express emotion.
When the parrot, who lives with Pepperberg, became sick a few
years ago, she had to take him to a vet and leave him overnight
in a strange place for the first time in his life. As she headed
for the door she heard Alex calling in his plaintive child's
voice, "Come here. I love you. I'm sorry. Wanna go back."
</p>
<p> Why Did Intelligence Evolve, Anyway?
</p>
<p> If animals indeed have the capacity to understand and
manipulate symbols, the question then becomes why and when did
they develop it. For answers, scientists have turned once again
to chimps, who both in the wild and in captivity show the
ability to formulate plans and make tools. Kanzi has been most
helpful in this regard.
</p>
<p> In an experiment supervised by Nicholas Toth of Indiana
University, Kanzi watched as a favorite treat was placed inside
a box. The box was then locked, and the key was placed inside
another box tied up by a cord. It added up to a Houdini-like
challenge for the chimp: how to get to the treat.
</p>
<p> But inside his cage, Kanzi had the makings of a tool that
could solve the riddle: some pieces of flint he had selected
during an excursion to the countryside. No sweat! By slamming
the flints against the concrete floor, the chimp created
knifelike chips, which he used to cut the cord and free the key.
He then used the key to open the other box and grab the treat.
</p>
<p> Toth notes that in several runs through the experiment,
Kanzi always used the chip to cut toward himself, an observation
that might help Toth better understand the first tools of Homo
habilis some 2 million years ago. "For a Stone Age archaeologist
like myself, seeing this is almost like a religious
experience," says Toth, whose university awarded Kanzi a prize
for providing the most insight into the origins of technology.
</p>
<p> Observations of apes in the wild provide further insights.
In the Tai forest in the Ivory Coast, Swiss biologist
Christophe Boesch points out a flat piece of granite with two
small hollows on the top. The rock has marks from heavy use for
some purpose. "If an anthropologist came upon this in the
forest," says Boesch, "he might think he had found a human
artifact." Instead, it is used by chimpanzees for nut cracking.
The chimps place a panda nut in one of the depressions and then
smash it with a smaller stone. Boesch has watched a mother chimp
instruct her young in the art of nut cracking.
</p>
<p> Still, toolmaking does not entirely explain why apes,
humans and other animals developed big brains. Gorillas,
orangutans and bonobos are roughly the intellectual peers of
chimps but rarely resort to tool use. Nor does the need to build
tools fully account for the enormous expansion of human
brainpower during the past million years. As recently as 100,000
B.C., Homo sapiens were using only the crudest tools, even
though their brains had already reached the present size--large enough to put men on the moon, probe the basis of matter
and tinker with the genetic code. Because big brains need a lot
of high-calorie food and require large craniums, which makes
childbirth difficult, scientists have looked for other
evolutionary pressures to account for their development.
</p>
<p> Machiavellian Chimps
</p>
<p> The answer may be politics, which is hardly confined to
human society. Scottish psychologists Richard Byrne and Andrew
Whiten believe chimps are positively "Machiavellian" in their
efforts to acquire power within a group. In the Mahale Mountains
in Tanzania, for instance, Japanese primatologist Toshisada
Nishida observed one male chimp shift his support between two
more dominant males who needed his allegiance to maintain power.
The bigger males curried favor with this artful manipulator by
allowing him access to fertile females. When a ruler began to
take him for granted, the canny old chimp would shift allegiance
to the pretender, thus ensuring himself continual access to
mates without fear of attack from his superiors.
</p>
<p> In the complex game of social chess played by chimps and
other primates, having the intellectual skills to anticipate a
rival's moves and engage in deceit is a distinct advantage.
Consider the double deception observed at a feeding station in
Tanzania's Gombe Stream Reserve. A wild chimp had the luck to
be alone next to a feeding box when it was opened by remote
control. Noticing that another, more dominant chimp was
approaching, the first one closed the box and moved nonchalantly
away until the second chimp moved on. Once the interloper was
gone, the first chimp opened the box to claim the food. The
second chimp, however, had cleverly hidden himself just out of
sight and triumphantly returned to snatch the bananas. There are
enough examples of such ape trickery to suggest that perhaps
Koko really was lying when she made the signs "Kate there bad."
</p>
<p> Knowing Whom to Trust
</p>
<p> A crucial question raised by such devious behavior is, To
what degree does an animal actually understand what's in its
rival's mind? If an animal knows when another creature is
misinformed or has valuable knowledge, it gains an enormous
advantage. In the late 1980s, a pioneer of animal-language work
came up with an ingenious way of probing this question.
</p>
<p> David Premack actually devised his simple test to study
children. First, a child is shown a tableau in which a little
girl named Sally puts a marble in her bag and then leaves the
room. Before Sally returns, another girl, Ann, takes the marble
from Sally's bag and puts it in a box. The child is then asked
where Sally will look for the marble when she returns.
Three-year-olds will point to the box, because that is where the
marble is; but four-year-olds understand that Sally has the
mistaken belief that the marble is still in her bag and that she
will look for it there.
</p>
<p> Psychologist Daniel Povinelli at the University of
Southwestern Louisiana has conducted a number of experiments
that adapt Premack's test for primates. In one version,
chimpanzees had to choose which of two humans would be better
at helping them find some hidden food. While the animals
themselves could not see where the food was being hidden, they
could observe that only one of the two humans had a full view
of the process. When asked to choose a helper, the chimps
overwhelmingly chose the human who knew where the food was
hidden.
</p>
<p> Just as four-year-olds have an insight that
three-year-olds lack, chimps have an advantage over lesser
primates. When Povinelli tried his experiment with rhesus
macaques, the monkeys proved unable to distinguish between the
human who knew where the food was and the one who didn't--even
after 600 attempts.
</p>
<p> Psychologists concoct some absurd situations to plumb the
depths of chimp insight. For instance, one experiment has the
apes observe two handlers deliver cups of juice. One
accidentally spills juice on the floor; the other overturns the
cup deliberately. When asked to choose a handler to deliver
their next cup of juice, chimps prefer the clumsy person,
suggesting that they are aware they are better off with a klutz
than with a helper with evil intent. Again, in analogous
experiments capuchin monkeys appear to be less shrewd. The
animals will, pitiably, continue to put their trust in a human
helper who eats rather than delivers their food, even after he
or she has stuffed himself 150 times with the monkeys' treats.
</p>
<p> To Andrew Whiten, the striking difference between monkeys
and chimps supports the notion that within primates there is a
"mental Rubicon--not the familiar one with humans on one side
and everyone else on the other, but with man and at least the
apes on the same side."
</p>
<p> Even if some other creatures have crossed this mental
Rubicon, human analytical abilities remain vastly superior to
anything demonstrated elsewhere in the animal kingdom. In
virtually all studies of animal intelligence and language
skills, performance plummets as more elements are added to a
task and as an animal has to remember these elements for long
periods. By contrast, humans can call on vast working memory.
</p>
<p> Many evolutionary scholars suspect that as ancient human
groups became larger, the need to keep track of ever more
complex social interactions was what really pushed the human
brain toward superiority. Both dolphins and chimps have very
complex interactions, but the intricacy of their social world
pales beside the lattice of entanglements that characterized
human society as early Homo sapiens banded together to gather
food and defend themselves. In Somalia today, warring clans
identify friend or foe by demanding that those accosted recite
their ancestry going back many generations. It is easy to see
how similar challenges in antiquity might have driven the
development of brainpower.
</p>
<p> It does not lessen the grandeur of the human intellect to
argue that it evolved partly in response to social pressures or
that these pressures also produced similar abilities in
"lesser" creatures. Instead, the fact that nature may have
broadly sown the seeds of consciousness suggests a world
enlivened by many different minds. There may even be practical
applications. Studies of animal cognition and language have
yielded new approaches to communicating with handicapped and
autistic children. Some scientists are pondering ways to turn
intelligent animals like sea lions and dolphins into research
assistants in marine studies or into lifeguards who can save the
drowning upon command.
</p>
<p> If the notion that animals might actually think poses a
problem, it is an ethical one. The great philosophers, such as
Descartes, used their belief that animals cannot think as a
justification for arguing that they do not have moral rights.
It is one thing to treat animals as mere resources if they are
presumed to be little more than living robots, but it is
entirely different if they are recognized as fellow sentient
beings. Working out the moral implications makes a perfect
puzzle for a large-brained, highly social species like our own.
</p>
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