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I, Monkey: Test Subjects Recognize Their Mirror Images

Charles Q. Choi, LiveScience Contributor

For the first time, scientists have found that monkeys can recognize themselves in mirrors, which hints that they are self-aware.

The finding suggests the mental divide between humans and their distant relatives is not as great as researchers have thought.

Normally, monkeys do not recognize that the reflections they see are their own images - they often ignore mirrors or treat reflections as intruders. Only a few animals, including elephants and dolphins, apparently do possess this form of self-awareness.

Chimpanzees, our closest living relatives, can recognize their own reflections, using mirrors to inspect marks that researchers have drawn on the chimps' faces. Still, nearly all other primates fail this "mark test," leading scientists to conjecture about the "cognitive divide" between us and them.

But in a new study, rhesus macaques, a species of monkey found throughout South Asia, apparently could recognize themselves in mirrors, contradicting the results of a standard mark test.

And what did the monkeys especially like inspecting with mirrors? Their own genitals.

An accidental discovery

As part of a study into attention deficit disorder, neuroscientist Luis Populin at the University of Wisconsin and his colleagues placed electrode-loaded implants on the heads of rhesus monkeys to help record their brain activity. Animal technician Abigail Rajala then noticed that one of the macaques seemed to recognize himself in a small mirror, Populin recalled.

"I told her the scientific literature says they can't do this," Populin said, "so we decided to do a simple study."

Staring at a mirror to inspect a harmless, temporary mark drawn on its face is usually seen as a sign that an animal is aware that the mirror shows its own reflection and not that of another animal. Animals that lack self-awareness might, for example, search for the "animal" behind the mirror.

The monkeys failed this standard mark test. Still, it seems Rajala (now a doctoral student) was right. Nearly all the monkeys that had received the implant stared at mirrors as they examined and groomed their foreheads near the implant. They also turned upside down as they examined parts of their bodies they had never seen before, such as their genitals, and adjusted mirrors to get a better view of themselves.

Macaques usually interpret their reflections as intruders and adopt either aggressive or submissive poses, but the implanted monkeys did so far less often, also indicating self-awareness, Populin said. When the researchers covered the mirror with black plastic, the monkeys ignored the mirror. [Read "Fish Fear Their Own Reflections"]

Monkeys without the implants did not use the mirrors.

"We think the marks used in the standard mark test are not relevant enough for the monkey to show interest," Populin told LiveScience. "We think that the implant on their heads constitutes such a significant change - a 'super-mark' - that it motivates them to look in the mirror."

He noted that one monkey with an implant did not use the mirror. "This may simply be indicative of individual variation," Populin said. He added that not all chimps pass the mark test, either.

The discovery could help scientists further explore the mysterious, complex phenomenon we call self-awareness.

"We are interested in understanding the neural mechanisms underlying this ability," Populin said.

The scientists detailed their findings online today (Sept. 29) in the journal PLoS ONE.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100929/sc_livescience/imonkeytestsubjectsrecognizetheirmirrorimages

 



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No Mental Chumps: Chimps Decipher What Others Are Thinking

Charles Q. Choi, LiveScience Contributor

Chimpanzees apparently can figure out what others are thinking, a mental ability seen nowhere else in the animal kingdom so far except for in humans, scientists find.

This discovery may shed light on how advanced the mind of the last common ancestor of humans and chimps might have been.

In recent years, research has revealed just how much chimpanzees - humanity's closest living relatives - have in common with us. They can hunt with spears, play with improvised dolls and mourn their dead.

Past research also showed that chimps can figure out what others know. For instance, subordinate chimpanzees ordinarily let more dominant members get at food first, but they will eat items if they know that others cannot see them.

It was an open question as to whether chimps' mental capabilities might go beyond knowing what others might know to what others might think. Now scientists find they might possess this advanced mental ability.

The researchers tested 12 juvenile and teenage chimpanzees housed at the Wolfgang Köhler Primate Research Center. First the apes watched while a single piece of food, such as a banana slice, was hidden under one of two boards placed on a table. If food was tucked under one board, that board would visibly not lie flat on the table, since the good under it propped it up at a slant; if it was concealed under the other, that board would remain flat, because there was a hole in the table under that board.

The table (which held the boards) was then temporarily hidden from view. Sometimes another chimp was then given a chance to look for a snack at the table. The table was then shown again to the first set of apes.

Normally, the apes that saw the food get hidden went for the slanted board after they were again shown the table. However, if they knew that competitors had been given a chance at that table, they went after the other board. In other words, they avoided the option they would have normally chosen themselves on the assumption that the competitor had already done so and remembered which board was which.

"When a cognitive ability like this can be shown in our closest living relative - and, to our current knowledge, in no other non-human species - it can be argued that the last common ancestor might also have shared this ability," researcher Martin Schmelz, a primatologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, told LiveScience. "The more we know about the differences and similarities of humans and chimpanzees, the clearer our picture of the last common ancestor can become."

The scientists detailed their findings online Jan. 31 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

You can follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20110131/sc_livescience/nomentalchumpschimpsdecipherwhatothersarethinking

 

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