dbrodbeck
dbrodbeck t1_isc2uqj wrote
Reply to comment by koreth in Do crickets respond to TV’s and video audio, with their own sounds? by Bony_Geese
That paper I linked sort of talks about such things.
You have to look at the animal's life history, its evolutionary history, its brain etc. It's a very interdisciplinary thing. I'm a psychologist, but I'm also quite comfortable with zoologists and neuroscientists (to the point where I teach that stuff as well).
dbrodbeck t1_isbfoyp wrote
Reply to comment by csreid in Do crickets respond to TV’s and video audio, with their own sounds? by Bony_Geese
They know more than many give them credit for. My work has over the years focused on food storing birds. There are birds who store tens of thousands of seeds in a 40 km radius and recover the vast majority of them, months later. They use memory to do this.
The biggest trap you can get in is trying to rank order species on some made up 'evolutionary ladder' ranking of intelligence. You can study animal intelligence, but it's complicated.
Here's a good theoretical paper to get anyone started who is interested. It's old, but it's a bedrock type of thing, the ideas in here were, at the time, revolutionary, and now are generally accepted.
dbrodbeck t1_isa8te7 wrote
I study animal behaviour and cognition for a living.
Playback experiments are pretty common in animals that use sound to communicate. Song is played on a speaker and reactions are tested. Here's an example
dbrodbeck t1_j15q9kq wrote
Reply to comment by NORAD_Tracks_Santa in We're 1st Lt Sean Carter and Capt. Steve Collier, members of the NORAD Tracks Santa team with NORAD, and we're ready to answer your questions on this 67-year old mission! by NORAD_Tracks_Santa
My kids are 21 and 29 now, so not much looking at the tracker any more for them, but I admit, I still do, and I find it chokes me up every year. Thanks for doing this.