Chimpanzees are better at reasoning than we thought - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 科学

Chimpanzees are better at reasoning than we thought

New research shows that they can weigh evidence in a rational way
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":7.73,"text":"The writer is a science commentator"}],[{"start":11.18,"text":"We humans hold beliefs about the world — and, for the most part, are happy to update those beliefs in the light of fresh evidence. That capacity to reflect on what we know and how we know it, and to act accordingly, is widely considered a hallmark of human rationality."}],[{"start":31.27,"text":"Our species is not alone in this regard, scientists now claim. Researchers have shown that chimpanzees can also change tack after weighing up different types of evidence. The experiments involved the animals judging which of several containers held food, having been given sequential clues of varying persuasiveness. The study was published in the journal Science last month."}],[{"start":60.16,"text":"According to an accompanying commentary, the animals consistently made rational choices two or three times more often than non-rational ones across the experiments. “These findings demonstrate that nonhuman apes have a spontaneous ability to weigh evidence of varying strengths, revise prior choices, and adapt when evidence is revealed to be unreliable,” wrote Brian Hare, an evolutionary anthropologist at Duke University in North Carolina, who was not involved in the study."}],[{"start":96.34,"text":"The finding, which builds on previous less conclusive work by others, tells us something important: the great cognitive shift that allowed humans to reason about the world is also present to some degree in our closest non-human relatives, as the 19th-century English naturalist Charles Darwin always suspected. "}],[{"start":122.07000000000001,"text":"The international research team was led by Hanna Schleihauf from Utrecht University and involved observing animals at the Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Uganda. In the first of a series of experiments, each involving up to 23 animals, a chimp was shown a piece of food that was subsequently hidden in one of two containers."}],[{"start":148.4,"text":"The animal was then offered an initial clue about that morsel’s location. That first clue could be strong, such as seeing it inside a container with a transparent window. Less direct initial hints included the container being rattled, suggesting something inside, or traces of food behind the container."}],[{"start":172.85,"text":"After the chimp had chosen, it was then shown other evidence about the boxes — sometimes stronger than the first clue, sometimes weaker — and offered the chance to switch. The chimps behaved exactly as expected if they were indeed weighing evidence in a rational way: they stuck with their first choices when the initial clue was strong and the counter-evidence underwhelming; but were more likely to switch when given weak evidence first and subsequently a strong clue that the food lay elsewhere. "}],[{"start":210.49,"text":"Other ingenious variations on this hide-and-seek game, sometimes involving three containers, suggested the chimps could tell the difference between old and new information: they tended to ignore repetitions of the same rattle but reconsidered if the rattle was followed by a dropping sound, as if a second morsel had been dropped into the box. They soon wised up to misleading clues, such as pictures of food painted on a container."}],[{"start":244.87,"text":"The authors conclude: “Chimpanzees did not attribute a fixed value to each type of evidence; instead, they weighed the relative strength of evidence.” The work, they claim, strongly supports the idea of the animals possessing “genuine metacognitive capacities”, able to juggle concepts like hypotheses, evidence and causal connections."}],[{"start":269.32,"text":"That finding, that chimpanzees can think about thinking, puts Pan troglodytes in closer cognitive proximity to Homo sapiens than ever before. Such a conclusion is unlikely to have surprised the late primatologist Jane Goodall, who co-founded the sanctuary housing the chimps used in the study and who so often unmasked the similarities, such as tool use, between ourselves and other species.  "}],[{"start":299.52,"text":"Neither would it have shaken Darwin, who coyly sidestepped the question of human evolution in On the Origin of Species but addressed it later in The Descent of Man. There, Darwin describes taking a live snake to the monkey house at London’s Zoological Gardens, and observing as “monkey after monkey, with head raised high and turned on one side, could not resist taking a momentary peep into the upright bag, at the dreadful object lying quietly at the bottom”."}],[{"start":335.26,"text":"It confirmed simian curiosity of “a most human fashion”, adding to Darwin’s radical conviction there was “no fundamental difference between man and the higher mammals in their mental faculties”."}],[{"start":351.19,"text":"More than 150 years later, and amid deeper scrutiny of our fellow primates, science is still chipping away at our status as the greatest of great apes."}],[{"start":365.48,"text":"Letter in response to this column:"}],[{"start":368.61,"text":"Perhaps we can take a cue from chimps’ behaviour / From Avinashiappan Myilsami, Post Graduate Teacher, Sulur, Tamil Nadu, India"}],[{"start":389.27,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1763422566_6343.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

Anthropic如何在AI编程取得突破并撼动商业格局

新的人工智能驱动工具正在压缩软件开发的时间与成本,并对从法律到广告等行业构成威胁。

并非所有软件都面临相同的AI威胁

从安全服务到能够彻底改造的公司,许多企业或许都能在“AI末日大决战”中存活下来。

李开复:为何中国将在消费级AI领域击败美国

这位中国人工智能先驱谈到了AI领域两大强国之间的竞争,以及企业为何需要更积极主动地采用AI技术。

据信俄罗斯间谍航天器已拦截欧洲关键卫星通信

欧洲安全官员认为,莫斯科正将未加密的欧洲通信内容作为攻击目标。

印度欢迎特朗普的“协议”,但回避讨论俄油禁令

分析人士对美国总统声称莫迪已承诺停止购买俄罗斯原油一事深表怀疑。

特斯拉能自己造芯片吗?

与火星殖民或神经植入等项目相比,建设芯片制造厂更扎根于现有的工业实践。但历史表明此类冒险举措尤其容易导致价值破坏。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×