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Ancient Tales for modern tests| Curio Facts
What do kids and crows have in common?
Every child is familiar with Aesop's Fables
for their lessons on morality. It turns out that the ancient tales aren't just
good life advice they're also handy cognitive tests. Scientists have used one
particular fable over and over to see if animals have a sense of cause and
effect. Some pass with flying colors, but others, not so much.
Ancient Tales for modern tests:
If you're not familiar, Aesop's Fables are
a collection of morality tales - 725 of them, to be exact — dating back to at
least ancient Greece. In each one, an animal faces a human-like situation where
its decisions inevitably teach some practical lesson about life.
In "The Crow and the Pitcher," a
crow is about to die from thirst when it happens upon a pitcher used to pour
water. It dunks its beak into the pitcher and found that there was hardly any
water in it. The little water that was there was too far down inside the vessel
for the crow to reach it. Suddenly, the crow has a stroke of genius and drops a
small pebble into the pitcher. Then another and another. It drops so many
pebbles that eventually the water level is high enough to reach its beak, and
the crow finally quenches its thirst. The moral of the story? Little by little
does the trick.
Scientists love this fable because it's a
great illustration of cause and effect.
Rook, Check mate:
It's probably not surprising that the first
animal scientists thought to try this test on was a crow. Well, a rook, to be
precise, which is a bird in the same family as crows.
Around 2009, University of London
comparative psychologists Nathan Emery and Christopher Bird set out to
determine if these birds could actually achieve what Aesop's crow did. They
gave each of four rooks a clear plastic tube that had a worm floating near the
bottom, next to a pile of stones. The amount of water and the sizes of the
stones varied among the birds. Two solved the problem on their first try, two
others gave up before trying again, but all eventually were able to drop enough
stones in the tube to get the worm.
Since then, scientists have used this test
in myriad ways. They tested young children (only children aged 5 and older
performed as well as the birds). They tested a different species of crow (they
passed easily). They tried using objects of different sizes and densities,
tubes of different volumes. Over and over, members of the crow family proved
that they could pass this essential test of cause and effect.
In 2017, University of Wyoming researchers
decided to use another wily animal: the raccoon. They didn't quite measure up
to the crows, but the researchers thought that wasn't necessarily a sign they
weren't as intelligent. Only two of seven raccoons figured out that they could
pick up stones and drop them in the water to get a treat. A third, however, did
something that shows a different kind of intelligence. "During final
trials, Raccoon 22 innovated a unique solution by gripping the inner rim of the
apparatus with her forepaws and, while rocking her body back and forth,
overturned the entire apparatus and retrieved the reward," the researchers
wrote. Raccoon 22 is our spirit animal
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