Crows outthink monkeys, can grasp recursive patterns

By Joshua A. Krisch

 published 1 day ago

https://www.livescience.com/crows-understand-recursive-reasoning

In cognitive tests for recognizing certain types of patterns, crows outperformed monkeys.

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Scientists recently found that crows are capable of grasping a complex cognitive principle known as recursion.

Scientists recently found that crows are capable of grasping a complex cognitive principle known as recursion. (Image credit: R.A.Chalmers Photography/Alamy Stock Photo)

Crows are notoriously clever — the songbirds can use toolsunderstand the concept of zero and follow basic analogies. Now, a new study suggests that their grasp of one complex cognitive principle in particular is better than that of monkeys and comparable to that of small children.

Researchers found that crows can distinguish paired elements buried in larger sequences, a cognitive ability known as recursion. Consider the sentence: “The cat the dog chased meowed.” Although the sentence is admittedly a grammatical nightmare, most adults would quickly understand that the cat meowed and that the dog chased the cat. This capacity to pair elements like “cat” to “meow” and “dog” to “chase” in a sentence, or any sequence, was once thought to be a uniquely human trait. 

The new study, however, suggests that crows can do it too. And this latest research builds on previous work demonstrating the existence of recursive reasoning among monkeys. “One of the most distinguishing features of human communicative cognition may turn out not to be that human-specific after all,” lead author Diana A. Liao, a postdoctoral candidate at the University of Tübingen in Germany, told Live Science in an email.

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Grammar isn’t the only place where recursion occurs. Our ears can distinguish a musical phrase within a larger piece, and our minds can set aside a mathematical expression embedded between parentheses. Indeed, a 2020 study published in the journal Science Advances(opens in new tab) demonstrated that people can follow recursive patterns even without a formal background in reading and mathematics. In that study, people from isolated Amazonian tribes identified recursive patterns about as well as adults living in the U.S. did. Nonhuman primates also demonstrated an ability to understand recursion; the same study found that rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) were only slightly inferior to toddlers when it came to distinguishing paired elements, such as opened and closed brackets, from a morass of symbols.

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The new study, published Nov. 2 in Science Advances(opens in new tab), builds on this work to extend the findings beyond primates. “The study is well-designed and executed, and the results are clear and compelling,” said Stephen Ferrigno(opens in new tab), an assistant professor in the psychology department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and lead author on the 2020 paper. Ferrigno was not involved in the new study.

Related: Crows and ravens took over the world because they’re spookily smart (and brawny, too)

Liao and her colleagues started off by teaching two crows (Corvus corone) to identify the symbols { }, [ ] and < >, rewarding them with treats only when the birds pecked in the order of a center-embedded recursive sequence, such as { ( ) } or ( { } ). It took the birds about a week to learn to peck the symbols in that order, after which the crows sat for their final exams: strings of similar symbols they had not yet seen, such as { } [ ]. Humans, toddlers and monkeys faced with such a test usually understand that if { ( ) } is correct then { [ ] } or [ { } ] is also correct.

As for the crows, not only did they perform as well as preschoolers typically do on such tests, they also outperformed monkeys. In the 2020 study, adult humans selected a center-embedded structure between 60% and 90% of the time; children did so 43% of the time; and monkeys, 26% of the time. In the new study, crows selected center-embedded structures about 40% of the time.    

This result suggests that the ability to identify recursive sequences, often considered a defining feature of language, may have initially evolved for other purposes. “The finding that non-linguistic animals — both monkeys and crows — can represent these complex sequences suggests that this ability may have evolved outside of the language domain,” Ferrigno said.

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It is also possible that recursive logic is a key component of communication, even for crows. “If corvid songbirds can understand and produce recursive structures, they may also use it for vocal communication and managing their intricate social relationships,” Liao said. 

Meanwhile, from a neurobiological perspective, the findings open the door to  questions about how non-mammalian brains perform cognitive feats once thought to be beyond the scope of animals that lacked a six-layered neocortex. “Our results suggest that certain brain structures, such as the layered cortex of primates, are not necessary to support recursive understanding,” Liao said. “Further research on the neural circuits underlying this ability would be fascinating.”

Our Violence Toward Nature and Animals Permeates Everything

By Karen Davis, PhD, President, United Poultry Concerns

https://upc-online.org/activism/221109_our_violence_toward_nature_and_animals_permeates_everything.html

Dionysus Maenads: The Death of Orpheus by Émile Bin
Dionysus’ Maenads: Émile Bin, The Death of Orpheus, 1874.

“Our violence toward nature and other species permeates everything as the violence of human slavery did. Most people are too divorced from nonhuman life to get it, except for their dogs and cats.” ‑ David Johns via email to Karen Davis, Nov. 2nd.

We are in agreement about Michael Moore and about the Left. Most people Left, Right, Center are dissociated from the world that exists outside our parochial domain. Environmentalists too are divorced from other-than-human-beings. Ditto “Religious” people for the most part. Ditto almost everyone else.

Environmentalism bypasses individual animals for the Aggregate (Species) and Biosystems / Ecosystems. The mainstream Left being rooted in Marxism does not recognize nonhuman animals as fellow creatures, worthy of moral consideration as individuals in their own right.

Years ago, what used to be the annual Summit for the Animals meetings, consisting of the heads of national animal advocacy organizations in the U.S., invited an environmentalist named Roderick Nash to speak. Nash seemed unable to comprehend that animals are Individuals, not just Species. Or that domesticated animals such as farmed animals are as sensitive and alert as “wild” animals are.

The environmentalist J. Baird Callicott wrote in one of his pieces in Environmental Ethics that domesticated animals, especially farmed animals, and in particular “hens” and “bobby calves,” have nothing in common with “wild” animals but, rather, they resemble tables and chairs deserving no moral considerateness from human beings.

A problem with the environmentalist / conservation / deep ecology perspectives is that they are rooted in a rigidly masculine sensibility that is virtually all “animus” with little or no “anima.” The fact that these perspectives’ representatives have chosen as their “heroes” and founders such notables as Theodore Roosevelt and Aldo Leopold, while rejecting John Muir in particular, as being “out of touch with Nature” because Muir supported Animals Rights and did not hunt and consider himself a Glorious Apex Predator who “Thinks Like a Mountain” devoid of pesky individuals like a chicken or even a wolf other than WOLF as Macho Icon – all this is pertinent to the problem of Environmentalism.

The fact is, there is no LIFE apart from individual embodiments of life. There are lives, not Life, except as an abstraction from reality.

This is not to say that women are all that great either. They aren’t. I had an experience a few years ago when the editor of a progressive publication invited me to contribute an article about Mother Hens for Mother’s Day. A few days later he informed me that my article had been rejected by another editor, a “radical feminist” who resented the idea that a mother hen could care for her chicks the way a human mother cares for her children.

Carol J. Adams wrote an important essay, “The Feminist Traffic in Animals,” in Neither Man Nor Beast, about the difficulty of getting organizers of feminist gatherings to agree to serve animal-free, or even just vegetarian (including eggs and mammary products but no meat) food at their events. Feminists complain[ed] that women are being “oppressed” by these requests, and that a vegetarian “option” suffices.

I’ve encountered some very cruel women over the years. Some of the worst are those who have found a “purpose” in life as DIY (Do It Yourself) animal controllers and killers enjoying the superadded exhilaration of writing articles, blogs and books about their exploits such as luring a hen with “kindness” in order to cut her throat and put pieces of her in “delicious” soup. Such women are prefigured in the murderous Maenads in Greek mythology who “nurse” wild animals as a prelude to tearing them to pieces.

Animal Rights philosopher John Sanbonmatsu has spoken and written eloquently about the modern lust among certain women, for domination of chickens and turkeys and goats and lambs and cows and rabbits – the visceral thrill they get, and can’t wait to share their naughty-girl sadism.*

An article online recently shows Georgia Senator Marjorie Taylor Greene sitting on the ground next to a wild pig she bragged she had just shot dead from a helicopter, just ‘cause she felt like it and wanted to enrapture her Base with how totally into assault weapons she is, what a He-Woman.

All other-than-human-animals, healthy and fit in their natural bodies and habitats and helplessly deformed and disfigured by ourselves, suffer in alien, dysfunctional “anthropomorphized” bodies and conditions for the insatiable pleasure and Will to Power of the Self-Idolizing Omnivore.

“Our goal has to be to figure out how we get through this bottleneck until the whole mess collapses and we have ensured what follows cannot subjugate others.” ‑ David Johns via email to Karen Davis, Nov. 2nd.

Go figure.

* UPC’s Seventh Annual Conscious Eating Conference March 10, 2018:
  www.upc-online.org › forums

Weatherwatch: ‘spicier’ Arctic Ocean is causing alarm

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Experts say warmer, saltier water caused by rising temperatures may have profound impact on sea ice

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2022/nov/10/weatherwatch-spicier-arctic-ocean-water-rising-temperatures-sea-ice

Kayaking at Monaco glacier in the Arctic Ocean
Kayakers in the Arctic Ocean. Temperature and salinity affect the density of seawater.Photograph: Ariadne Van Zandbergen/Alamy

David Hambling

Thu 10 Nov 2022 01.00 EST

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Oceanographers sometimes classify seawater aseither “spicy”, meaning warm and salty, or “minty”, when it is cooler and has a lower salt content. Temperature and salinity are important factors because of their effect on the density of seawater.

Cold water is heavier and tends to sink, which can drive large-scale movement. This contributes, for example, to the well-known El Niño oscillation off South America. Salty water is also denser, and again tends to sink.

These two effects may cancel each other out though, so spicy water, which is warmer but saltier, can have the same density as cooler but fresher minty water.

In some sea areas…

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Leg-hold traps are inhumane and ineffective

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Although California has outlawed leg-hold traps, a racoon was found last month with one clamped on its paw in San Rafael.
Melanie Piazza/WildCareAlthough California has outlawed leg-hold traps, a racoon was found last month with one clamped on its paw in San Rafael.

By ALISON HERMANCE | IJ correspondent

PUBLISHED:November 7, 2022 at 12:00 p.m.| UPDATED:November 7, 2022 at 5:30 p.m.

Marin County is home to a wonderful community of people who love, appreciate and respect local wildlife, but occasionally something happens to challenge the assumption that everyone here equally appreciates our wild neighbors.

Patient No. 22-3127 arrived at WildCare on Oct. 27 after being rescued in the Gerstle Park neighborhood of San Rafael. A concerned neighbor spotted the young raccoon trying to climb a tree with a heavy-duty steel trap clamped on her front leg. The neighbor called Marin Humane, and two animal services officers were dispatched to rescue the young animal and bring her to WildCare’s wildlife hospital.

California has outlawed leg-hold traps, and…

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Missing hunter found dead

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

The sheriff’s office said the 64-year-old California man failed to return to his group after going hunting Friday afternoon.

https://www.9news.com/article/sports/outdoors/missing-hunter-found-dead-san-miguel-county/73-0fddc0aa-c0fc-481e-9aa9-ef9549c96d30

Credit: San Miguel County Sheriff’s Office

Author:Nate Lynn

Published:8:29 PM MDT November 5, 2022

Updated:8:46 PM MDT November 5, 2022

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SAN MIGUEL COUNTY, Colo. — A man from California who failed to return to his group after going hunting in southwestern Colorado was found dead Saturday morning.

TheSan Miguel County Sheriff’s Officesaid the 64-year-old left his group of family and friends Friday afternoon with plans to return to them at their campsite in the Dry Creek Basin area outside of Norwood around sunset.

When he didn’t return, the group conducted a search but didn’t find him. They called dispatch at 5 a.m. Saturday and while deputies and search and rescue crews were preparing to search for him, the group resumed their own search and found the man dead…

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Search persists this weekend for apparent hunter shooting suspect

Jackson County Sheriff's Office hunting shooting suspect searchers, JCSO auto 11.4.22.jpg

JACKSON COUNTY, Ore. — A police search for a shooting suspect and getaway vehicle persists this weekend in Jackson County.

Jackson County Sheriff’s Office (JCSO) staff with federal agencies, Oregon State Police and Ashland Police Department started the search yesterday after a call reporting a gunshot wound victim at 12:24pm.

JCOS says the victim sustained a close-range gunshot wound to his leg while hunting near Conde Creek Road and South Fork Little Butte Creek Road with two hunting partners.  JSCO says, “The victim yelled out and the suspect left the scene. A witness spotted a white Chevy truck with a canopy leaving the area.”

The Sheriff’s Office says its preliminary investigation suggests the shooting appears to be a hunting accident and its detectives are investigating and checking leads. JCSO says U.S. Forest Service Law Enforcement, Bureau of Land Management Law Enforcement, Oregon State Police, JCSO, and Ashland Police Department are working to five the suspect vehicle.

JCSO says the victim drove to the intersection of West Fork Little Butte Creek Road and Lake Creek Road where a JCSO deputy applied first aid to the wound and a Mercy Flights ambulance took him to a local hospital for treatment for superficial injuries.

Follow @KDRV12 on Facebook and @KDRV on Twitter for the latest news, sports, and weather in Southern Oregon and Northern California.

https://www.kdrv.com/news/search-persists-this-weekend-for-apparent-hunter-shooting-suspect/article_de0fb71e-5d5e-11ed-9cc2-13984cd5bce7.html

Stranded cow that was too cold and weak to walk ‘rolled’ to safety near Okanogan

cow
Cow that was rescued Photo: Eli Smith

OKANOGAN – You’ve likely heard of ‘cow tipping’ but ‘cow rolling?’ The rolling of a fully-grown heifer cow was what needed to be done in order to save its life on Monday near Okanogan.

At around 4:30 p.m., Eli Smith was traveling along SR 20 at North Cook Mountain Road when he spotted the large animal standing in the middle of the road. Moments later, Eli says the bovine slipped and fell onto the road after a short time later and couldn’t get up. Smith says he was the first to arrive, but another passerby phoned emergency services for help.

The cow was apparently too cold and weak to stand on its own after wandering out in the elements for so long.

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Okanogan County Chief Deputy Laura Wright happened to be traveling in the area when the call about the cow came in. Wright, Eli and other bystanders tried to tow the animal off the road, but couldn’t because the animal was on its stomach. Moments later they determined that they could roll it and the plan worked. After a few rolls, the cow was out of the road.

The animal’s owner was contacted and arrived an hour later to haul the animal away to a safe and warm environment. The owner reportedly arrived to find that the heifer was covered with people’s clothes in an effort to preserve it better from the cold elements.

How likely is progress on climate at Cop27?

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Potential outcomes on 1.5C, climate finance, adaptation funding, loss and damage, World Bank reform and African gas

Participants attend the Cop27 climate summit in Egypt&#039;s Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.
Participants attend the Cop27 climate summit in Egypt’s Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.Photograph: Mohammed Salem/Reuters

Fiona Harveyin Sharm el-SheikhWed 9 Nov 2022 02.00 EST

Meeting the target of limiting heating to 1.5C

At Cop26 in Glasgow,countries agreed to limit global heating to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels. The pledges on emissions cuts they came forward with were not enough to meet this goal, however, so they agreed to return this year with strengthened commitments. Few have done so – only 24 submitted new national plans on emissions to the UN in advance of Cop27.

Likelihood:0/5

Verdict:There will not be enough progress here to meet the 1.5C goal, but there is a baby step forward – the UN estimates that the improved plans that have been submitted will…

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In Washington State, Hunters May No Longer Be “Necessary to Manage Wildlife”

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/in-washington-state-hunters-may-no-longer-be-necessary-to-manage-wildlife/ar-AA13Qwad?ocid=winp2sv1plustaskbarhover&cvid=6db230efa92d41fca162aac1d507fd32

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Colville, Washington is like a lot of bare-knuckle Western towns, with dusty pickups parked at family businesses, government agencies stabilizing the boombust ranch-and-timber economy, and a string of fast-food franchises along U.S. Highway 395 that heads north to Canada. It’s the late general season for deer this week in northeast Washington, but this year hunters aren’t seeing nearly as many elk or pine-ridge whitetails as usual.

With more predators and a new philosophy on wildlife, hunters in Washington could see a decreasing role in management.©John Hafner

They mostly blamewolvesthat have moved into this rural corner of Washington over the past decade and the increasing number of cougars that are no longer staying way out in the Colville National Forest. Instead, lions have been coming closer to town, following the scarcity of…

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YOUNG SE MINNESOTA HUNTER AIRLIFTED AFTER FALL FROM TREE STAND

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

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Young SE Minnesota Hunter Airlifted After Fall from Tree Stand

Young SE Minnesota Hunter Airlifted After Fall from Tree Stand

TJ Leverentz

TJ LeverentzPublished: November 7, 2022Braden Gunem ThinkStock

Nelson, WI(KROC-AM News)-A young hunter from Wabasha was airlifted from a Wisconsin property he was hunting at after he fell from his tree stand over the weekend.

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The Buffalo County Sheriff’s Office says deputies were dispatched to the property east of Wabasha shortly after 1 p.m. Sunday. A news release indicates 16-year-old Garret Pavelka told first responders he fell about 20 feet after a limb he was holding while climbing into the stand broke off of the tree.

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The teentold dispatchers he waslaying on…

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