Home Articles Animal Intelligence Keys of Intelligence: Bird Brains
  

postheadericon Keys of Intelligence: Bird Brains

User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 

Asked to put animals in order of intelligence, most people would put birds somewhere near the bottom. They are much smaller than us, they have small brains, and they look completely different. But there is more than one way to be intelligent.

Alex the intelligent parrot

In humans and other apes the cerebral cortex is large. In birds, another part of the brain - the hyperstriatum - is large instead. More intelligent mammals (such as chimpanzees) have proportionately bigger cortices than less intelligent ones (such as hamsters); in the same way, smart birds, such as parrots and crows, have especially big hyperstriata.

Because most scientists don't think birds are smart, they treat them as if they were stupid.

They put a pigeon in a box and test his or her reactions as if these were the result of nothing more than a set of "responses" which were ultimately linked to some kind of reward. Those scientists who have thought outside the box on this one have had some surprises.

At the University of Arizona Irene Pepperberg has spent the last twenty five years teaching parrots to understand and talk about abstract concepts such as colour, size and material. Her star pupil is called Alex.

If Alex is shown a blue object and a red object, and is asked "how different?" he will identify that they are different in colour. This also works with objects that he has never seen before. If he is shown two objects which differ in both size and colour, he can correctly identify "what colour bigger?"

He can also count. For example, when he is shown a mixture of keys and pieces of cork, he can say how many keys are present, or how many pieces of cork.

He can even say how many green cups (for example) are present in a display containing cups of other colours, other green objects, or different objects of different colours. He can tell you if one object is larger or smaller than another, without having to see both at the same time.

Of course, we all know that parrots are smarter than the average bird. But even pigeons are a lot more interesting than you would expect. A standard test of self-awareness is to see if an animal understands his or her reflection in a mirror.

To test this in pigeons an experimenter put blue dots on the birds when they were anaesthetized and taught them to peck at the dots when they woke up. One dot was hidden under their bib, so they couldn't see it directly. However, when they were put in front of a mirror they saw the dot, realised where it was, and pecked at it. This would only have been possible if they had some degree of self-awareness.

Pigeons can also make sense of photographs. By creating situations in which they peck at one picture rather than another, scientists can see what kinds of distinctions they can make. It turns out that they can be trained to distinguish between pictures that contain trees and those that don't, and can recognise particular humans in a photograph, even when they are wearing different clothes.

A well-known test of spatial cognition in humans uses three shapes.

The one on one side is the same as the one in the centre, except that it has been rotated. The one on the other side is also the same, but this one has also been reflected in a mirror. Humans find it quite hard to work out which is which.

Pigeons, on the other hand, find it very easy. Unlike humans, who have to rotate the images in their minds, pigeons can see the correct answer directly.

Pigeons also have astounding memories. In one experiment, they were shown 320 human holiday slides. Two years later they were able to distinguish these pictures from similar ones which they had never seen before.

Parrots, who are at the same intellectual level as monkeys or small children, are still kept in tiny cages for human amusement, and in some countries are even eaten as food.

Chickens, who are probably at least as intelligent as pigeons, spend their entire lives in cages so small that each bird has less space than a sheet of writing paper. They live short lives of intense suffering during which all their natural instincts are frustrated.

Have a think about this next time you go down to Kentucky Fried Person.

 

Our valuable member Dr. Paul Kail has been with us since Friday, 28 November 2008.

Show Other Articles Of This Author

Thinknovation
Karl's Weird News
Karl's Weird News
Links to weird, twisted and disturbing news for your entertainment and contemplation
  • Bacterial mega-feast coming to an end
    Gulf Surface Oil Vanishing Quickly The oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico appears to be dissolving far more rapidly than anyone expected, a piece of good news that raises tricky new questions about how fast the government should scale back its response to the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The immense patches ...
  • Aliens targeting Bosnian for special harassment
    Man hit by six meteorites is being 'targeted by aliens' A Bosnian man who claims he is being targeted by extraterrestrials after a series of meteorite strikes on his house has now been hit by a sixth space rock in the space of a few years. Radivoje Lajic first came ...
  • Some of us hate helicopters more than others
    Raging businesman' hung on to helicopter as it took off A businessman enraged that a helicopter blew debris on to his car and garden tried to cling to it as it took off, a court heard. Houshang Jafari, 59, lost his temper as the aircraft landed near his £1million flat, the jury ...
Humanifesto
Seeking alternatives for developing autonomous regeneration of the environment? Tired of pollution causing damaging weather changes because of the choices we citizens make? The climate is our commons; it is the root of the world's communities. Deep thinking will be needed, depending on the dilemma facing Earth. Ecological and economic matters will suffer equally from our emission-based energies. Energy has lasting environmental impacts, something environmentalist groups have warned about for years. Environmentalists are not just people passing moral judgment, they are just keenly aware that resources are finite. Food, fossil fuels and the markets, are global as is their impact. How great it would be if we could green the earth and grow the economy? A cleaner environment contributes to better health, helping us begins by learning how industrial activities can merge into the ecologically sound lifestyle. There is no limit on what we can do if we keep in mind local impact of our production with the moral clarity of our obligation to protect Mother Nature. A new organic Participatory ecology is forming; we can no longer turn blind eyes to the actions of those who pollute. We can preserve future growth by recognizing the problems, establishing protocols, and setting benchmarks for recognizing pollution reduction. Instead of exploiting the earth's natural resources, we will rely on renewable resources to save our legacy. If this makes sense to you, and you're serious about finding a solution for earth restoring technological advances, we'd love to hear your thoughts. Share with us ideas, problems, experiences with new technologies and environmental trends about restoring nature's right to clean water and abundant wildlife.
Recommended:

Osocio.org - Social advertising and non-profit campaigns from around the globe

The Molecular Biology of Paradise

Green Design will Save the World

The Venus Project is dedicated to confronting all of these problems by actively engaging in the research, development, and application of workable solutions to today's problems