[A very enjoyable news of the weird item.]

http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-na-apes2dec02,1,7663052.story?coll=la-headlines-technology

They're Going Ape for Computer Training
Chimps at a Chicago zoo log on in an experiment to study their abilities to 
communicate.

By William Mullen
Chicago Tribune

December 2, 2005


CHICAGO — Keo, a 47-year-old male chimpanzee at Lincoln Park Zoo, paced the 
floor of his nonpublic living quarters one recent afternoon, clearly 
annoyed with his keepers.

In his rolling gait, he would stride up to a glass wall, stop and glare at 
the humans on the other side. He was supposed to have been at work on his 
computer at 1:30 p.m., but now it was 1:40 p.m., and the door to a small 
adjoining room with the computer was locked so he couldn't enter.

Behind the glass, Steve Ross, the zoo's supervisor of behavioral and 
cognitive research, was a little annoyed too. He was waiting for two 
visitors, 15 minutes late, who were coming to see how he has been training 
Keo and other apes to use a touch-screen computer in order to measure their 
cognitive abilities.

The work Ross and his colleagues are doing is part of a movement in 
American zoos to hire their own scientists and allow others to use zoo 
animals for sophisticated studies that used to be done almost exclusively 
in university settings.

Among the experiments being conducted at Lincoln Park is long-term research 
on using computers to "talk to the animals." The idea is to get the apes to 
learn to use computer programs to communicate preferences on food, activity 
and living space. More broadly, Ross said, the work should add to the 
scientific literature on how and to what extent apes are able to think and 
perceive the world.

Keo's annoyance at being delayed suggests he is keenly aware of time, even 
though he can't tell time, Ross said. He and other apes judge the time of 
day with uncanny accuracy and are able to anticipate their scheduled 
activities, such as feeding and training sessions.

"Keo seems to gauge the time of day starting from the time keepers arrive 
every morning," Ross said.

That kind of obvious intelligence is driving zoos to develop projects like 
the computer study.

When Lincoln Park opened its $25.7-million Regenstein Center for African 
Apes in 2004, it was designed to handle such research. Besides housing the 
apes in natural habitats for public viewing, the building houses the Lester 
E. Fisher Center for the Study and Conservation of Apes, a zoo-funded 
research component that employs Ross.

Some of its experiments are conducted in public view, such as an artificial 
termite mound where visitors can sometimes watch as chimps and gorillas use 
sticks, or try to use them, as tools to retrieve favorite snacks.

To avoid distractions, the computer experiment is conducted in nonpublic 
areas like Keo's quarters and the basement holding areas the apes go in the 
morning while keepers clean their living spaces.

Keo was the first ape to be trained to use the screen. Now every Monday 
through Friday at 1:30 p.m., he and another chimp in his troop, 20-year-old 
Vicky, wait anxiously for the researchers to arrive. Usually Keo does the 
first session, then Vicky.

Currently Keo is doing a task Ross calls "match to sample." Keo squats in 
front of a 42-inch computer screen that places a 2-inch-high photo icon — 
the face of a chimp he has never met — somewhere on the screen. If he 
touches it, little edible balls called Primatreats, in pina colada and 
banana flavors, roll out of a slot at the bottom of the screen as a reward.

Moments later, two chimp face icons flash on the screen, the one he just 
touched and one of another chimp Keo has never met. If he touches the image 
of the first chimp, he gets a reward. If he touches the second image, he 
gets nothing.

"In each session, Keo has 30 opportunities — called trials — to win a 
reward for touching the right face," Ross said. "He has 10 minutes to get 
through each trial. Then we cut the experiment off for that day.

"Keo has gotten so good at it, he usually does all 30 in 2 1/2 minutes."

The exercise with the faces is just for training, getting Keo used to the 
idea that the icons mean something, that there are right and wrong answers.

"In the next three to four years, as more of our apes become accustomed to 
the screen, we can devise programs for them that we can use to ask them 
questions about their world and how they perceive it. In a fashion, it 
might give them a way to talk to us."

He said he and colleagues hoped to devise preference tests so the apes 
could say what foods they liked the most, which areas in the ape house they 
most enjoyed living in and how they reacted to individual keepers or visitors.

"For food preferences, for instance, we might put various food items on the 
screen, and they'll receive the item they select. Once they understand that 
they get the item they choose, that should tell us a great deal about their 
food preferences."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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