Happy, the self-recognizing dumbo
Elephents passed the Mirror Test!
The news is all over, and I thought it’s too ____ to not mention here. It’s work from Frans de Waal’s group at Emory. Picture here and 3 video clips on the PNAS supporting info site.
Psychology-Biological Sciences
Self-recognition in an Asian elephant( cognition | mirror self-recognition | theory of mind | intelligence | empathy )
Joshua M. Plotnik *, Frans B. M. de Waal *
, and Diana Reiss
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*Living Links, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, and Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322;
Osborn Laboratories of Marine Sciences, New York Aquarium, Wildlife Conservation Society, Brooklyn, NY 11224; and ¶Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027
Contributed by Frans B. M. de Waal, September 13, 2006
Considered an indicator of self-awareness, mirror self-recognition (MSR) has long seemed limited to humans and apes. In both phylogeny and human ontogeny, MSR is thought to correlate with higher forms of empathy and altruistic behavior. Apart from humans and apes, dolphins and elephants are also known for such capacities. After the recent discovery of MSR in dolphins (Tursiops truncatus), elephants thus were the next logical candidate species. We exposed three Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) to a large mirror to investigate their responses. Animals that possess MSR typically progress through four stages of behavior when facing a mirror: (i) social responses, (ii) physical inspection (e.g., looking behind the mirror), (iii) repetitive mirror-testing behavior, and (iv) realization of seeing themselves. Visible marks and invisible sham-marks were applied to the elephants’ heads to test whether they would pass the litmus "mark test" for MSR in which an individual spontaneously uses a mirror to touch an otherwise imperceptible mark on its own body. Here, we report a successful MSR elephant study and report striking parallels in the progression of responses to mirrors among apes, dolphins, and elephants. These parallels suggest convergent cognitive evolution most likely related to complex sociality and cooperation.
, Frans B. M. de Waal *
, and Diana Reiss
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