Chimps can 'think about thinking': study

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Press Trust of India Washington
Last Updated : Apr 04 2013 | 2:45 PM IST
Chimpanzees, our closest animal relatives, have the human-like ability to think about thinking, a process called metacognition, according to a new research.
"The demonstration of metacognition in nonhuman primates has important implications regarding the emergence of self-reflective mind during humans' cognitive evolution," said scientists from the Georgia State University and the University at Buffalo.
Metacognition is the ability to recognise one's own cognitive states.
"There has been an intense debate in the scientific literature in recent years over whether metacognition is unique to humans," said Michael J Beran of the Georgia State Language Research Center (LRC).
Chimpanzees at Georgia State's LRC have been trained to use a language-like system of symbols to name things, giving researchers a unique way to query animals about their states of knowing or not knowing.
In the experiment, researchers tested the chimpanzees on a task that required them to use symbols to name what food was hidden in a location. If a piece of banana was hidden, the chimpanzees would report that fact and gain the food by touching the symbol for banana on their symbol keyboards.
But then, the researchers provided chimpanzees either with complete or incomplete information about the identity of the food rewards.
In some cases, the chimpanzees had already seen what item was available in the hidden location and could immediately name it by touching the correct symbol without going to look at the item in the hidden location to see what it was.
In other cases, the chimpanzees could not know what food item was in the hidden location, because either they had not seen any food yet on that trial, or because even if they had seen a food item, it may not have been the one moved to the hidden location.
In those cases, they should have first gone to look in the hidden location before trying to name any food.
In the end, chimpanzees named items immediately and directly when they knew what was there, but they sought out more information before naming when they did not already know.
"This pattern of behaviour reflects a controlled information-seeking capacity that serves to support intelligent responding, and it strongly suggests that our closest living relative has metacognitive abilities closely related to those of humans," researchers said in a statement.
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First Published: Apr 04 2013 | 2:45 PM IST

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