devil's avocado
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Any thoughts?
Some animals, yes.
Any thoughts?
Some animals have demonstrated signs of self awareness i.e. that they are a singular and independent consciousness independent from, and different from, those around them. One common measure of this is "the mirror test" - the ability to recognize their own reflection as belonging to them and not belonging to another animal that looks like them. Many apes, some cetaceans and elephants have passed this test. Dogs have not.
When trying to determine whether an animal has self awareness it's important to not introduce anthropomorphic biases (i.e. "Lassie behaves so much like a person that he must be self aware!")
Any thoughts?
Any thoughts?
Any thoughts?
the one that passedOn the first day of the mark test (T5), a visible mark (Fig. 2) was applied to the right side of each elephant’s head, and an invisible sham-mark was applied to the left side of the head. The sham-mark controlled for both olfactory and tactile cues (i.e., texture), leaving only a visual component to
differentiate between mark and sham-mark
on another note...showed dramatically increased head touching early in the session, most of which (i.e., 12 of 14 times; Fig. 3; measured as rate per minute) occurred during or within 90 seconds after proximity to the mirror. All 12 touches during or right after mirror exposure came in contact with or close to (within 20 cm) the visible mark on the right side of Happy’s head. Head touches never came in contact with or close to the sham-mark on the left side of Happy’s head (binomial test 12 vs. 0, z 3.18, P 0.0008). Happy’s right-side vs. left-side bias on the first mark day differed significantly from that for head touches on nonmark days (Fisher’s exact test, P 0.025).
this is a major limiter of the mirror test. Many animals rely more on tactile, olfactory cues full stop. This means you might not want to trust a negative result in many cases, but it doesnt affect a positive one.One would further suspect a lack of ‘‘concern’’ about bodily appearance and cleanliness in elephants compared with primates. Whereas primates often groom specific spots on their bodies (27, 28), elephants rarely autogroom with their trunks (29, 30). Rather, they ‘‘substrate groom,’’ which includes dust-throwing and mud-bathing (30, 31). This manner of ‘‘grooming’’ actually adds debris to the body. It may very well be that because of an elephant’s large body-surface area (29) and the mud and sand it often carries around on its body, attention to detail is not a priority. A small paint mark may be trivial to them.
I am confused on the part I put in bold. How exactly is such a conclusion drawn from the postive results of mirror test such as above? The elephant in this case left the view of the mirror to touch the mark. If anyone has a link to a critique of the mirror test as an indicator of self awareness, please post it up.Proponents[who?] of the hard problem of consciousness claim that the mirror test only demonstrates that some animals possess a particular cognitive capacity for modeling their environment, but not for the presence of phenomenal consciousness per se
No it doesn't.Self aware means the ability to be objective to oneself.
Really? All actions are conscious? And yet the (re)action you use in your illustration is NOT conscious...This implies two centers of consciousness, one that is acting and the other that is aware of this action.
Repeating crap that has already been shown to be incorrect does not make it less crap.The result was the seed needed for civilization.
Compared to the other animals on that list, dogs have wretched eyesight! Even the "keen-eyed" breeds like poodles and retrievers would qualify as legally blind in most U.S. jurisdictions. Our Lhasa Apsos trip over their own toys and don't recognize us through a window.One common measure of this is "the mirror test" - the ability to recognize their own reflection as belonging to them and not belonging to another animal that looks like them. Many apes, some cetaceans and elephants have passed this test. Dogs have not.
Some animals have demonstrated signs of self awareness i.e. that they are a singular and independent consciousness independent from, and different from, those around them. One common measure of this is "the mirror test" - the ability to recognize their own reflection as belonging to them and not belonging to another animal that looks like them. Many apes, some cetaceans and elephants have passed this test. Dogs have not.
When trying to determine whether an animal has self awareness it's important to not introduce anthropomorphic biases (i.e. "Lassie behaves so much like a person that he must be self aware!")
I've met several blind dogs and it's hard to tell the difference. We babysat one and within four hours he was running all over the property just like our own dogs.
Humans have depended on their diurnal ability and a sense of color throughout time to help them find food. Dogs on the other hand, were not originally diurnal animals, until humans domesticated them. Consequently, the ability to see at night was originally more important to the dog than color. After all, their prey is often camouflaged with the surroundings, so they are unable to rely on color vision cues as heavily as humans do to find food.
The dog's ability to see detail, also termed acuity, is around six times poorer than an average human.
The central retina of the canine eye contains about 20% cones, while humans have an area of 100% cones called the fovea
Dogs don't bother watching TV so their eyesight must be different. Or maybe they are just not interested in the programs we watch?What mirror test are you talking about exactly? The most common is the mark-test. That's when they place a mark on a human child or great ape's face and then put a mirror in front of them. Half of all human 2 year olds, and all great apes at some age (chimps, gorillia, bonobo, orangutan) can also pass the test. This means they all have bodily self-awareness.
Dogs don't bother watching TV so their eyesight must be different. Or maybe they are just not interested in the programs we watch?![]()