Parrots show reasoning skills that have previously been seen only in great apes.
Humans, chimpanzees and other great apes can infer the presence or absence of hidden objects using even indirect evidence. Christian Schloegl and his colleagues at the University of Vienna tasked six African grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus; pictured) with determining which of two boxes obscured an object after they had witnessed one of them being rattled. Without the need for training, the parrots picked the correct container at rates above chance, even when the empty container was shaken and the birds had to use the absence of a sound to guide their decisions.
Paying attention to sounds may be more important to parrots than to other animals that have failed the same test, including monkeys and dogs, the researchers suggest.
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Parrots can make inferences. Nature 489, 338 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1038/489338c
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/489338c