alex's last words were "you be good, i love you". a sad day for
inter-species relations...
-rishab

http://www.economist.com/obituary/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9828615
Alex the African Grey
Sep 20th 2007
>From The Economist print edition

Science's best known parrot died on September 6th, aged 31

Brandeis University
THE last time Irene Pepperberg saw Alex she said goodnight as usual.
“You be good, ” said Alex. “I love you.” “I love you, too.” “You'll be
in tomorrow?” “Yes, I'll be in tomorrow.” But Alex (his name supposedly
an acronym of Avian Learning Experiment) died in his cage that night,
bringing to an end a life spent learning complex tasks that, it had been
originally thought, only primates could master.

In science as in most fields of endeavour, it is important to have the
right tool for the job. Early studies of linguistic ability in apes
concluded it was virtually non-existent. But researchers had made the
elementary error of trying to teach their anthropoid subjects to speak.
Chimpanzee vocal cords are simply not up to this—and it was not until
someone had the idea of teaching chimps sign language that any progress
was made.

 
Even then, the researchers remained human-centric. Their assumption was
that chimps might be able to understand and use human sign language
because they are humanity's nearest living relatives. It took a
brilliant insight to turn this human-centricity on its head and look at
the capabilities of a species only distantly related to humanity, but
which can, nevertheless, speak the words people speak: a parrot.

The insight in question came to Dr Pepperberg, then a 28-year-old
theoretical chemist, in 1977. To follow it up, she bought a one-year-old
African Grey parrot at random from a pet shop. Thus began one of the
best-known double acts in the field of animal-behaviour science. 

Dr Pepperberg and Alex last shared a common ancestor more than 300m
years ago. But Alex, unlike any chimpanzee (with whom Dr Pepperberg's
most recent common ancestor lived a mere 4m years ago), learned to speak
words easily. The question was, was Alex merely parroting Dr Pepperberg?
Or would that pejorative term have to be redefined? Do parrots actually
understand what they are saying?


Bird brained
Dr Pepperberg's reason for suspecting that they might—and thus her
second reason for picking a parrot—was that in the mid-1970s
evolutionary explanations for behaviour were coming back into vogue. A
British researcher called Nicholas Humphrey had proposed that
intelligence evolves in response to the social environment rather than
the natural one. The more complex the society an animal lives in, the
more wits it needs to prosper. 

The reason why primates are intelligent, according to Dr Humphrey, is
that they generally live in groups. And, just as group living promotes
intelligence, so intelligence allows larger groups to function,
providing a spur for the evolution of yet more intelligence. If Dr
Humphrey is right, only social animals can be intelligent—and so far he
has been borne out.

Flocks of, say, starlings or herds of wildebeest do not count as real
societies. They are just protective agglomerations in which individuals
do not have complex social relations with each other. But parrots such
as Alex live in societies in the wild, in the way that monkeys and apes
do, and thus Dr Pepperberg reasoned, Alex might have evolved advanced
cognitive abilities. Also like primates, parrots live long enough to
make the time-consuming process of learning worthwhile. Combined with
his ability to speak (or at least “vocalise”) words, Alex looked a
promising experimental subject.

And so it proved. Using a training technique now employed on children
with learning difficulties, in which two adults handle and discuss an
object, sometimes making deliberate mistakes, Dr Pepperberg and her
collaborators at the University of Arizona began teaching Alex how to
describe things, how to make his desires known and even how to ask
questions.

By the end, said Dr Pepperberg, Alex had the intelligence of a
five-year-old child and had not reached his full potential. He had a
vocabulary of 150 words. He knew the names of 50 objects and could, in
addition, describe their colours, shapes and the materials they were
made from. He could answer questions about objects' properties, even
when he had not seen that particular combination of properties before.
He could ask for things—and would reject a proffered item and ask again
if it was not what he wanted. He understood, and could discuss, the
concepts of “bigger”, “smaller”, “same” and “different”. And he could
count up to six, including the number zero (and was grappling with the
concept of “seven” when he died). He even knew when and how to apologise
if he annoyed Dr Pepperberg or her collaborators.

And the fact that there were a lot of collaborators, even strangers,
involved in the project was crucial. Researchers in this area live in
perpetual fear of the “Clever Hans” effect. This is named after a horse
that seemed to count, but was actually reacting to unconscious cues from
his trainer. Alex would talk to and perform for anyone, not just Dr
Pepperberg. 

There are still a few researchers who think Alex's skills were the
result of rote learning rather than abstract thought. Alex, though,
convinced most in the field that birds as well as mammals can evolve
complex and sophisticated cognition, and communicate the results to
others. A shame, then, that he is now, in the words of Monty Python, an
ex-parrot.



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