Friday, October 11, 2019
Animal Intelligence Essay -- Papers
 Animal Intelligence       Intelligence is defined as the ability to acquire and apply knowledge.     Psychologists have exploited this concept in many ways to try and     determine whether non-human animals are capable of intelligence.       From social learning it is logical to assume that, since non-human     animals are able to both acquire and use new behaviours, they must be     intelligent in some way. Heyes stated that there are 6 types of     behaviour which suggest intelligence. These are imitation,     self-recognition, social relationship formation, role-taking,     deception and perspective taking. These 6 behaviours are referred to     as the theory of mind (ToM).       Imitation is the ability to copy another's behaviour, this may be     because the behaviour is adaptive. Kawai (1965) studied Japanese     macaques and found that due to one monkey's actions (Imo), a large     amount of the macaque population acquired a useful behaviour in a     5-year period. Kawai reported that Imo would wash her sweet potatoes     before consumption, later other macaque monkeys showed the same     behaviour. Kawai thus suggested that the rest of the monkeys had     imitated Imo's behaviour.       Galef suggested that this behaviour was due to social learning. Given     the time period, of 5 years, it is possible that other monkeys had     learned this potato washing behaviour by themselves instead of     imitating Imo. The observers in this experiment provided the sweet     potatoes, and would pay more attention to the monkeys that washed the     potatoes. This attention would be a reinforcer of the behaviour     causing other monkeys to copy it. Although there is not enough     supportive evidence for imitation, some behaviours ca...              ...ceive the trainer     in white and pay attention to instructions given by the trainer in     green. The chimpanzee successfully got the food most of the time. This     supports the idea that non-human animals are capable of deceit. The     characteristics of this behaviour are very like a conditioned     behaviour.       It is nearly impossible to say whether non-human animals are     intelligent. Most studies, in this field of psychology, were carried     out on primates, and it is thought that these animals are naturally     superior. It seems most behaviour in the research discussed in this     essay can be explained through association learning, therefore not     actually a result of intelligence. It is difficult to falsify whether     animals are intelligent or not because, although they are able to     solve problems they only show some aspects to suggest ToM.                        
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