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Chicks are smart, scientists confirm

Study reveals baby chickens aren't just cute - they are also math whizzes

By Jennifer Viegas

Discovery Channel

updated 9:41 a.m. PT, Wed., April. 1, 2009

Baby chickens aren't just cute - they are also

whizzes at math, according to a new study.

The study, published in the latest Proceedings of

the Royal Society B, presents the first known

evidence that any non-human animal can perform

consecutive addition and subtraction calculations

on the same set.

It is also " the very first demonstration of some

arithmetic ability in young animals, " lead author

Rosa Rugani told Discovery News.

Since the chicks could work with numbers up to

five, and prior research suggests the limit for

human newborns is three, it's possible that

chicks could beat babies if the two groups were

pitted against each other in a math contest.

Taken as a whole, however, the study supports the

theory " that animals and humans share a

non-verbal, and even pre-verbal in the case of

humans, numerical system " that can perform

precise arithmetic on small number sets - " with a

limit of three or four " -- and make estimates

about larger sets, said Rugani, a researcher in

the Center for Mind/Brain Sciences at the

University of Trento in Italy.

Rugani and her colleagues tested the arithmetic

skills of 17 domestic " Hybro " chicks derived from

the White Leghorn breed. To get them accustomed

to the experiment objects, the scientists reared

the chicks with five yellow toy balls, which the

baby chickens accepted as members of their own

family.

The chicks " become socially attached to the

imprinting object, even though this is an

artificial one, and respond by promptly following

the ball if it is moved, and by emitting distress

calls if the ball is removed, or soft calls when

the ball is placed back in their home cage, "

Rugani explained.

The scientists next set up a room like a darkened

theater, with two opaque screens at the front. As

the chicks sat in front of the screens, the

scientists dangled the balls, tied to fine

threads, behind the screens.

The goal of each experiment was to have the

chicks choose the largest set. Animals generally

gravitate toward larger groups of individuals or

things, likely due to a youngster's reliance on

others.

The most complex test required the chicks to keep

track of the number of balls through addition or

subtraction, since balls were transferred either

individually or in sets from one screen to

another.

Despite the ball disappearing acts, the chicks

spontaneously chose the screen hiding the larger

number of hidden toys. The birds made their

selection by sticking their heads behind the

correct screen to see their old " companions. "

As for the chicks' ability to work with a larger

set than human babies could, the researchers

speculate it might have something to do with

family size. They suspect chicks might even be

able to work with up to 10 balls, because broods

often consist of eight to 10 siblings, but Rugani

said she and her team haven't yet " investigated

the upper limit of chicks' ability in this task. "

Since non-human animals appear to have natural

math skills, it's now thought that children,

whose math abilities far exceed those of chickens

as the two species mature, don't need to master

the logic of arithmetic tables to add and

subtract.

 

A preliminary study conducted by Harvard

researcher Elizabeth Spelke and colleagues showed

that five-year-old children could even handle

simple word problems like, " Sarah has 64 candies

and gives 13 of them away, and John has 34

candies. Who has more? "

" We've known for some time that adults, children

and even infants and nonhuman animals have a

sense of number, " Spelke said. " We were surprised

to see, however, that children spontaneously use

their number sense when they're presented with

problems in symbolic arithmetic. "

© 2009 Discovery Channel

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29992796/

 

MSN Privacy . Legal

© 2009 MSNBC.com

--

Kim Bartlett, President of Animal People, Inc.

Postal mailing address: P.O. Box 960, Clinton WA 98236 U.S.A.

email <ANPEOPLE web-site: http://www.animalpeoplenews.org/

We believe that the Golden Rule applies to animals, too.

 

 

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