作者
Joshua M Plotnik, Frans BM De Waal, Diana Reiss
发表日期
2006/11/7
期刊
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
卷号
103
期号
45
页码范围
17053-17057
出版商
National Academy of Sciences
简介
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 …
引用总数
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学术搜索中的文章
JM Plotnik, FBM De Waal, D Reiss - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006