Dear MARMAM Community, 

My colleague Rachel Morrison and I announce the publication of our recent paper 
Precocious development of self-awareness in dolphins in the open access journal 
PLOS ONE. 


Abstract <>
Mirror-self recognition (MSR) is a behavioral indicator of self-awareness in 
young children and only a few other species, including the great apes, 
dolphins, elephants and magpies. The emergence of self-awareness in children 
typically occurs during the second year and has been correlated with 
sensorimotor development and growing social and self-awareness. Comparative 
studies of MSR in chimpanzees report that the onset of this ability occurs 
between 2 years 4 months and 3 years 9 months of age. Studies of wild and 
captive bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) have reported precocious 
sensorimotor and social awareness during the first weeks of life, but no 
comparative MSR research has been conducted with this species. We exposed two 
young bottlenose dolphins to an underwater mirror and analyzed video recordings 
of their behavioral responses over a 3-year period. Here we report that both 
dolphins exhibited MSR, indicated by self-directed behavior at the mirror, at 
ages earlier than generally reported for children and at ages much earlier than 
reported for chimpanzees. The early onset of MSR in young dolphins occurs in 
parallel with their advanced sensorimotor development, complex and reciprocal 
social interactions, and growing social awareness. Both dolphins passed 
subsequent mark tests at ages comparable with children. Thus, our findings 
indicate that dolphins exhibit self-awareness at a mirror at a younger age than 
previously reported for children or other species tested.

Published: Published: January 10, 2018

Read the full publication via PLOS ONE: 
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189813 
<https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189813>
Citation: Morrison R, Reiss D (2018) Precocious development of self-awareness 
in dolphins. PLoS ONE 13(1): e0189813. 
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189813

 

 My best,

 

 Diana

Diana Reiss, PhD
Professor 
Director, Animal Behavior & Conservation MA Program 
Department of Psychology 
Hunter College 
[email protected]
Office phone: 212-650-3432
Lab phone: 212-772-4322






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