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What Can We Learn from Chimpanzees?

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Title: What Can We Learn from Chimpanzees?


1
What Can We Learn from Chimpanzees?
2
The Descent of Man
  • In his On the Origin of Species, Charles Darwin
    did not speculate on the origins of humans.
  • In a his subsequent book, The Descent of Man, he
    postulated, based on the current distribution of
    primates, that humans originated on the African
    continent.

3
Primate Relationship
4
Ethology
  • Konrad Lorenz and Niko Tinbergen began the study
    of animal behavior in the field.
  • Pecking order in hens in 1922
  • Like Darwins theory of Natural Selection, they
    focused on aggression and evolution through
    competition

5
Jane Goodall at Gombe
  • The paleonologist, Louis Leakey sent Jane Goodall
    to study chimps as a possible way of
    understanding Homo habilis like those found with
    stone tools along the lake shore at Olduvai Gorge.

6
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7
Tool Use
  • Jane Goodall was the first to observe tool use in
    another species besides humans.
  • She has been quoted saying,If chimps had guns
    and knives and knew how to handle them, they
    would use them as humans do.

1. Termite Movie 2. Sponge Movie 3. Tool Kit
Movies
8
Fossil Stone Tools
  • Julio Mercader of the University of Calgary
    reported, in Feb 2007 PNAS, evidence of
    chimpanzee nut cracking tool use from 4,300 years
    ago.

9
Hunting with Spears
  • Iowa State University professor Jill Pruetz made
    public on Feb 22, 2007 here observations of a
    chimpanzee fashioning limb that it used to spear
    and kill a bush baby.
  • Watch the video just after the incident observed.

10
Language
  • In the 1970s, a lowland gorilla named Koko began
    to be taught American Sign Language in response
    to spoken English by Dr. Penny Patterson.
  • Koko currently has a working vocabulary of over
    1000 signs, understands 2000 English words, and
    commonly signs phrases 3-6 words long.
  • She has an IQ ranging between 70-95.

11
Japanese Primatology
  • Kinji Imanishi focused on kinship and cooperative
    relationships (in opposition to aggression).
  • Defined culture as the non-genetic transmission
    of habits.

12
Culture
  • Culture is a way of life shared by the members
    of one group but not necessarily with the members
    of other groups of the same species. It covers
    knowledge, habits, and skills, including
    tendencies and preferences, derived from exposure
    to and learning from others. Whenever systematic
    variation in these characteristics between groups
    cannot be attributed to genetic or ecological
    factors, it is probably cultural. The way
    individuals learn from each other is secondary,
    but that they learn from each other is a
    requirement. Thus, the culture label does not
    apply to knowledge, habits, or skills that
    individuals readily acquire on their own.
    Frans de Waal

13
Chimps in Atlanta
  • Frans de Waal has embraced the anthropomorphism
    with chimps and has demonstrated typical human
    behaviors requiring some form of conscious
    reasoning political maneuverings associated with
    power and sex, as well as more recent
    demonstrations of reciprocity.

14
Hypothesis Testing Error
15
Types of Error
  • Researchers can be in error two distinct ways.
    They can
  • Dismiss a valid hypothesis, aType I Error
    (support the Alternative when the Null is true)
  • Embrace an invalid hypothesis, a Type II Error
    (support the Null when the Alternative is true)

16
Anthropomorphism Type II Error
  • Anthropomorphism supports projecting human
    thoughts and feelings onto animals (embracing the
    Null Hypothesis)
  • Null Hypothesis Animals have human-like
    conscious intentions when they behave like
    humans.
  • Alternative Hypothesis Animals dont have a
    human-like psychology.
  • To reduce the chance of committing the
    Anthropomorphic Type II Error, the behavioral
    sciences have created a institutional bias
    against interpreting any animal behavior from a
    human perspective.

17
Anthropodenial Type I Error
  • Anthropodenial rejects projecting human thoughts
    and feelings onto animals (Dismiss the Null
    Hypothesis)
  • The behavior sciences dont have a symmetrical
    bias against anthropodenial, and thus it exposes
    itself to making Type I Errors.

18
The Problem with Chimps
  • The fear of anthropomorphism, or anthropodenial,
    fails to take into account the shared
    evolutionary history of chimpanzees and humans,
    increasing the likeliness that researchers reject
    the null hypothesis when it is, in reality, true.
  • Shouldnt our psychology be as conserved as our
    anatomy and physiology?

19
  • Any animal whatever, endowed with well-marked
    social instincts would inevitably acquire a
    moral sense or conscience, as soon as its
    intellectual powers had become as well developed,
    or nearly as well developed, as in man.
    Charles Darwin

20
Humanities Uniqueness
  • Mans special place in the universe has been one
    of abandoned claims and moving goalposts.
  • From tool use, to language, to culture, man
    continues to runs face-to-face with the fact that
    we share a evolutionary history with other life
    and mostly with our nearest cousin the
    chimpanzee.

21
Genetic and Genomics
  • In September 2005 the sequencing of the chimp
    genome was announced.

22
Myosin Gene Example
  • Scientists have discovered a myosin mutation
    restricted to the jaw muscle that appears to
    coincide with the beginning of the rapid
    expansion of the hominin cranium.

23
Bibliography
  • http//magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0304/featu
    re4/index.html?fswww7.nationalgeographic.com
  • http//www.nature.com/nature/focus/chimpgenome/ind
    ex.html
  • http//www.nature.com/nature/journal/v437/n7055/in
    dex.html
  • http//www.nature.com/news/specials/chimpgenome/in
    dex.html
  • http//www.koko.org/
  • http//news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/07
    0222-chimp-video.html
  • http//news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/07
    0213-chimps-tools.html
  • http//news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/10/10
    06_041006_chimps.html

24
Movies
  • http//www.arkive.org/species/GES/mammals/Pan_trog
    lodytes/
  • http//www.emory.edu/LIVING_LINKS/crawfordvideo.ht
    ml

25
Further Reading
  • Jane Goodall (1971) In the Shadow of Man
  • Frans de Waal (1982) Chimpanzee Politics Power
    and Sex among Apes
  • Frans de Waal (2001) The Ape and the Sushi
    Master
  • Frans de Waal (2006) Our Inner Ape

26
Hand Communication
  • Holding out a Hand the most common gesture but
    meaning depends on context and can be for
    begging, bodily contact, or support.

27
Facial Communication
  • Grin wide baring of teeth expresses fight and
    distress.

28
Vocal Communication
  • Scream
  • Bark
  • Grunt
  • Whimper
  • Hoot

29
Bodily Displays
  • Bluff Display when adult males sway their upper
    body, hoot, show erect hair, and culminating in a
    circling or charging some member of the group.

30
Reconciliations
  • Chimpanzees are a social species.
    Reconciliations are used in maintaining group
    cohesiveness amongst the competitiveness of
    acquiring food and mates.

31
  • Must have a good memory of social interactions
  • Intelligent manipulators (interesting word) of
    not only tools but of social instruments.
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