This is a posting from another list I am on.
Jeff Nagelbush
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


DISCOVERY CHANNEL SPECIAL WATCHES OSU CHIMPS LEARN TO READ
 >COLUMBUS, Ohio - After a little more than three years' effort, 
psychologists at Ohio State University
have taught a pair of young chimpanzees to "read" the names of nearly a 
dozen objects, to recognize the
animals' own printed names and the names of tools they need to acquire their 
favorite foods.
 >
 >In three more years, they hope to teach the animals to communicate in 
simple sentences.
 >
 >
 > Sally Boysen and friend.
 >That may seem a modest accomplishment -- giving a chimp a dozen-word 
vocabulary. But it is really a
major step forward in a 20-year study of how these great apes learn, 
communicate and handle information.
And at the end of this process, these animals may be able to use it to tell 
us - in their own words - about
chimpanzee culture and society.
 >
 >Sally Boysen, a professor of psychology at Ohio State, has spent more than 
two decades investigating
how a colony of chimps at the university learn and communicate. Her latest 
work is the subject of an
hour-long documentary, "Keeli & Ivy: Chimps Like Us," set to air Sunday 
night, April 14, 2002, (8 PM ET)
on the Discovery Channel.
 >
 >
 >--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 >
 > The pivotal question for the future, however, is whether the two young 
chimps can learn syntax - can
they put the words together in novel combinations, as human children learn 
to do.
 >--------------------------------------------------------------------------
 >
 >Aside from Boysen and her staff, the real stars of this program are two 
six-year old primates whose
arrival at the OSU Chimpanzee Center gave researchers the chance to test 
this species' ability to process
information sequentially. Humans excel at this ability and that, ostensibly, 
may set us apart from other
animals.
 >
 >It hasn't been clear, however, if this talent might possibly be 
established in chimps to teach them simple
reading skills. While Boysen's work with nine other chimps over the years 
made great strides, part of the
process of acculturating the animals to the research tasks has made testing 
this hypothesis difficult. With
Keeli and Ivy, however, Boysen had a clean slate to work with.
 >
 >"We knew from our earlier work in teaching the animals numbers and how to 
count that they had some
ability to process information sequentially," Boysen said. "I wanted to look 
at a different symbolic
representational system that would force the animals to construct abstract 
symbols in a sequence.
 >
 >"I decided that teaching them English -- using reading, writing and 
constructing words based on
alphabetic characters - would work nicely. It seemed to me that if we had 
chimps that were young
enough, that they could learn to build that kind of system."
 >
 >Years before, one of Boysen's other chimps, Bobby, had shown an uncanny 
ability to learn number
sequences and even to fill in missing numbers in a sequence. The next step 
was to shift from numbers to
letters and two-year-old Keeli and Ivy were at a perfect age to try.
 >
 >"The idea was to start them with a sequential task while they were little 
so that they could 'build' a
template that used the alphabet. We started with 'A,' then 'AB,' then 'ABC,' 
'ABCD' and 'ABCDE' to give
them the idea that the letters had an order to them," Boysen explained.
 >
 >After the animals seemed to understand that, the researchers added simple 
three-letter words - "POP" (the
chimps love orange soda), "KEY" (the cabinet where the soda is stored in the 
lab is locked with a key), and
"CAT" (both chimps adored the housecats roaming the center, though while 
Keeli was affectionate and
gentle, Ivy enjoyed teasing the animals).
 >
 >But "building" even those simple words proved a slow and arduous task so 
Boysen shifted to "whole
word recognition," temporarily abandoning the challenge of the chimps 
spelling out the words.
 >
 >"It really helped to switch to using the whole words, " the researcher 
said.
 >
 >"The chimps started learning things much more rapidly. We quickly 
introduced pictures of Keeli and Ivy
and images of several of their other chimpanzee companions and their English 
names. Now we've added
the names of certain tools - a stick and a sponge - that are functional in 
the animals daily lives." In the wild,
chimpanzees use sticks to fish for termites that are out of reach, deep in 
dirt mounds. They also use wads
of leaves to soak up water to drink. The sponge serves the OSU chimps as a 
surrogate for the leaves.
 >
 >Boysen's team is teaching the two primates to use their limited vocabulary 
in different ways, such as
making a request.
 >
 >"Right now, they are using them (the words) functionally," she said. "They 
have to ask for a stick to
reach pudding that is out of their reach, or for the sponge to soak up 
orange soda from a tube."
 >
 >The pivotal question for the future, however, is whether the two young 
chimps can learn syntax - can
they put the words together in novel combinations, as human children learn 
to do.
 >
 >"We're being very careful to make sure that we don't impose any syntax or 
grammar on the animals as
they learn to recognize English words," Boysen said. "We want to see if any 
patterns or regularities emerge
in the animals rudimentary language that can tell us things about how they 
see themselves and their
environment.
 >
 >"I think we can use this approach to study the so-called 'theory of mind 
issues - how one chimpanzee
perceives the state of mind of another," she said. Earlier work with her 
other chimps showed Boysen that
the animals are able to detect whether another primate is aware of a 
possible, specific threat or reward.
 >
 >Keeli's and Ivy's young age was key to the success so far with this 
project, which raises the question of
whether there is a window in time, a sensitive period, when primates like 
these might be able to learn in this
way.
 >
 >"It's important that chimps have some types of learning experiences early 
in their lives, between birth and
the age of three or four years old, just as these are the most important 
years for critical learning in human
children," Boysen explained.
 >
 >"But chimps won't be able to express their ideas or thoughts in as 
sophisticated a manner as children will
eventually be able to do. That means that our challenge will be to be as 
creative as possible in trying to
measure their true abilities.
 >
 >"The only real limiting factor will probably be our own limitations in 
devising new ways to do just that,"
she said.
 >
 >#
 >
 >Contact: Sally Boysen, (614) 457-9259; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 >Written by Earle Holland, (614) 292-8384; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 >
 >http://www.osu.edu/researchnews/archive/chimps.htm


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