Solar Energy News  
Great Apes Think Ahead

Taken together these results strongly suggest that great apes engage in planning for the future.
by Staff Writers
Lunds, Sweden (SPX) Jun 25, 2008
Apes can plan for their future needs just as we humans can - by using self-control and imagining future events. Mathias and Helena Osvath's research, from Lunds University Cognitive Science in Sweden, is the first to provide conclusive evidence of advanced planning capacities in non-human species.

The complex skill of future planning is commonly believed to be exclusive to humans, and has not yet been convincingly established in any living primate species other than our own. In humans, planning for future needs relies heavily on two mental capacities: self-control or the suppression of immediate drives in favor of delayed rewards; and mental time travel or the detached mental experience of a past or future event.

In a series of four experiments, Mathias and Helena Osvath investigated whether chimpanzees and orangutans could override immediate drives in favor of future needs, and therefore demonstrate both self-control and the ability to plan ahead, rather than simply fulfill immediate needs through impulsive behavior.

Two female chimpanzees and one male orangutan, from Lund University Primate Research Station at Furuvik Zoo, were shown a hose and how to use it to extract fruit soup. They were then tempted with their favorite fruit alongside the hose to test their ability to suppress the choice of the immediate reward (favorite fruit) in favor of a tool (the hose) that would lead to a larger reward 70 minutes later on (the fruit soup).

The apes chose the hose more frequently than their favorite fruit suggesting that they are able to make choices in favor of future needs, even when they directly compete with an immediate reward.

New tools the apes had not encountered before were then introduced: one new functional tool which would work in a similar way to the hose, and two distractor objects. The apes consciously chose the new functional tool more often and took it to the reward room later on, where they used it appropriately, demonstrating that they selected the tool based on its functional properties.

According to the authors, this indicates that the apes were pre-experiencing a future event i.e. visualizing the use of the new tool to extract the fruit soup.

One of the decisive experiments excluded associative learning* as an explanation of the results. Associative learning has been suggested to account for the findings in previous planning studies on animals (corvids and great apes), and therefore the previous studies have not been generally accepted as evidence for non-human planning.

Taken together these results strongly suggest that great apes engage in planning for the future. The authors conclude that "the results of this study entail that capacities central to humans evolved much earlier than previously believed."

Related Links
Animal Cognition
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Bacteria Anticipate Coming Changes In Their Environment
Princeton NJ (SPX) Jun 25, 2008
Microbes may be smarter than we think. A new study by Princeton University researchers shows for the first time that bacteria don't just react to changes in their surroundings -- they anticipate and prepare for them.







  • Bulgaria to look at new reactors at partly shut nuclear plant
  • Australia must strengthen India ties: foreign minister
  • Analysis: Middle East nuclear renaissance?
  • RWE, Electrabel file binding offers for stake in Bulgarian nuclear power plant

  • UN climate chief asks G8 summit to agree on 2020 emission targets
  • Ice Cores Map Dynamics Of Sudden Climate Changes
  • EU CO2 emissions drop 7.7 percent from 1990 levels: EAA
  • Urgent Need For New Computer Models To Address Climate Change

  • France, Italy isolated in opposition to EU tuna fishing ban
  • EU declares war on illegal fishing with tougher sanctions
  • Fish Don't Fart - Invention Offers Easy Solution To Food Shortages
  • EU confirms closure of industrial tuna fishing season

  • Bacteria Anticipate Coming Changes In Their Environment
  • Great Apes Think Ahead
  • Researchers Find An Evolutionarily Preserved Signature In The Primate Brain
  • World-Class Environment Vision To Bring Back The Species

  • NASA, ATK Conduct First Launch Abort System Igniter Test For Orion
  • Orion's New Launch Abort Motor Test Stand Ready For Action
  • Researchers To Upgrade Safety And Performance Of Rocket Fuel
  • NASA chief backs proposal for European spaceship

  • Nuclear Power In Space - Part 2
  • Outside View: Nuclear future in space
  • Nuclear Power In Space

  • Ocean Satellite Launch Critical To Australian science
  • GAO Report Reveals Continuing Problems With NPOESS
  • Satellite for tracking sea levels set for launch
  • Jason-1 Will Make It's 30,000th Orbit

  • BAE Computers To Manage Data Processing For Satellite Missions
  • 'Spore' computer game aliens coming to virtual life
  • Space Radar To Improve Mining Safety
  • Integral Systems Integrated Solution To Support JCSAT-12

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement