Are we smart enough to know how smart animals arewhat is


Anthropology : Questions on Chapters 1-5 of De Waal (2016) Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are?

Using the book, say something about (give a definition and/or example of) each of the following terms.

What is the relevance of the term to understanding animals? If you use any external sources, you must cite them fully. It is fine to discuss this assignment with others or work in teams as long as you answer each part in your own words. Please type your responses.
1. Umwelt (page 6, 12)
2. Ecological Niche (6)
3. Behaviorism versus Ethology (27)
4. Instinct/innate behaviors (4,40)
5. Trial and error learning (56)
6. Operant conditioning (31)
7. Cognition (69)
8. Human exceptionalism/saltationist view versus evolutionary continuity/connection (13, 26, 43, 121-122)
9. Anthropomorphism versus anthropodenial (24 and 26)
10. Clever Hans Effect (45)
11. Anecdote (42, 67)
12. Homology versus analogy (75)

Fill in this table, to the best of your ability:

Behavior or cognitive ability

Species described in book

Briefly describe the field observation, experiment or anecdote

Page numbers

Self-recognition or self-awareness

elephant, chimpanzee

A mark placed on a sleeping animal; animal sees mark in the mirror and touches it repeatedly

 

Culture

Japanese Macaque

 

51

Inferential reasoning

 

 

54

Face recognition

 

 

70

Tool Making

 

 

77-83

Chapter 4: Language

1. Fill in this table, to the best of your ability:

Species

Skill or phenomenon and how studied

Conclusion

African Grey Parrot (Alex)

Ability to add, symbolism

 

Chimpanzee (Nim)

 

 

Gorilla (Koko)

 

 

Honeybees

Referential signaling - observation

 

Bobobo (Kanzi)

 

 

Eli and Cali (dogs)

Brain activation via MRI

 

 

2. What is Wernicke's area and how does it support the position of evolutionary continuity?

3. What is the FoxP2 gene and how does it support the position of evolutionary continuity?
Chapter 5:
1. What is neo-creationism and why does De Waal object to it?
2. How does De Wall use the iceberg metaphor to explain evolutionary continuity (125)?
3. Read the paragraph on page 129 that begins "Methodology..." What might this suggest not only about testing other animals, but testing people (for example, K-12 students)?
4. What is theory of mind (ToM) (130)? How has it been studied (give some examples)? What have we learned?
5. What is one more interesting thing you learned from Chapter 5?

Complete this worksheet using the book 1) De Waal, Frans (2016) Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are? New York: W.W. Norton and Company Inc. (ISBN 978-0-393-24618-6)

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