Some animals can reflect upon, monitor, regulate their states of mind

Washington, September 15 (ANI): Conducting extensive research into animal cognition, psychologists at the University at Buffalo have found that some animals may share humans’ ability to reflect upon, monitor or regulate their states of mind.

“Comparative psychologists have studied the question of whether or not non-human animals have knowledge of their own cognitive states by testing a dolphin, pigeons, rats, monkeys and apes using perception, memory and food-concealment paradigms,” said Dr. J. David Smith, a comparative psychologist at the university.

“The field offers growing evidence that some animals have functional parallels to humans’ consciousness and to humans’ cognitive self-awareness,” he added.

He counts dolphins and macaque monkeys among such species.

Recounting the original animal-metacognition experiment with Natua the dolphin, Smith said: “When uncertain, the dolphin clearly hesitated and wavered between his two possible responses, but when certain, he swam toward his chosen response so fast that his bow wave would soak the researchers’ electronic switches.”

He added: “In sharp contrast, pigeons in several studies have so far not expressed any capacity for metacognition. In addition, several converging studies now show that capuchin monkeys barely express a capacity for metacognition. This last result,” Smith says, “raises important questions about the emergence of reflective or extended mind in the primate order. This research area opens a new window on reflective mind in animals, illuminating its phylogenetic emergence and allowing researchers to trace the antecedents of human consciousness.”

Smith describes metacognition as a sophisticated human capacity linked to hierarchical structure in the mind because the metacognitive executive control processes oversee lower-level cognition, to self-awareness because uncertainty and doubt feel so personal and subjective, and to declarative consciousness because humans are conscious of their states of knowing and can declare them to others.

Therefore, Smith says: “It is a crucial goal of comparative psychology to establish firmly whether animals share humans’ metacognitive capacity. If they do, it could bear on their consciousness and self-awareness, too.”

He concludes, “Metacognition rivals language and tool use in its potential to establish important continuities or discontinuities between human and animal minds.”

A research article describing his study has been published in the journal Trends in Cognitive Science. (ANI)

Freediver swims through longest Oz ocean cave in record 2minutes 40secs

London, Aug 25 (ANI): A freediver has set a new world record by swimming through Australia’s longest underwater cave.

Mike Wells swam almost 400ft to create a new record.

And it took him two minutes and 40 seconds to master Fish Rock Cave, off New South Wales.

Wells, the first man to do this, said that it was a difficult task to complete.

“It was very hard. But I could see the light at the end of the tunnel, literally,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

He had reportedly tried similar feat twice earlier on the cave, which is 85ft below the surface, but had to pull out due to cramp. (ANI)

Burmese leader Suu Kyi ‘to be charged’ over American’s visit

London, May 14 (ANI): Burmese authorities are to charge the pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, and her two maids over an incident in which an American swam across a lake to visit her at her house, her National League for Democracy party said on Thursday.

Police in the military-ruled nation detained John Yettaw, a US national, last week for gaining access to the 63-year-old Nobel laureate’s off-limits residence in Yangon and staying there for two days.

“Her lawyer said the authorities will charge the lady and her two maids at the court in Insein prison,” Nyan Win, a spokesman for her National League for Democracy party, referring to Myanmar’s most notorious jail.

According to The Telegraph, it is not known what the man’s motive was or what he did at Suu Kyi’s home, where he spent two days.

According to the New Light of Burma newspaper, a mouth piece for the military regime, he swam into the compound on Sunday night but was only detected and arrested as he swam out of the compound on Tuesday night.

Aung San Suu Kyi, 65, is the daughter of the country’s independence hero, General Aung San, and the world’s only Nobel peace laureate currently in detention. She has spent most of the last 19 years under house arrest since winning national elections in 1990. (ANI)

Serena Williams’ tiny bikini bottoms ‘disappear’ on Miami beach!

London, April 7 (ANI): Tennis ace Serena Williams gave onlookers an eyeful after her tiny bikini bottoms reportedly fade away from view after she bend over to board a jet ski on Miami beach.

The curvy player was snapped enjoying the sun as she swam and played with seaweed in a skimpy black bikini.

The former world number one was said to have had the uncomfortable wedgie as she was taking a break with her boyfriend, reports the Sun.

The 27-year-old is the present US Open and Australian Open singles champion and has won 20 Grand Slam titles: ten in singles, eight in women’s doubles, and two in mixed doubles.

Serena is also the younger sister of former World No. 1 professional female tennis player Venus Williams. (ANI)

Male humpback whales favor enormous females

Washington, Feb 14 (ANI): A new study has found that male humpback whales favor the largest females.

Female humpback whales are usually larger than males to begin with, measuring up to around 50 feet long and weighing approximately 79,000 pounds.

“While obesity is understandably a serious problem in humans, it is interesting to find that in some of the largest animals ever to exist, bigger is indeed better. Thus size does matter!” lead author Adam Pack, an assistant professor of psychology and biology at the University of Hawaii at Hilo, told Discovery News.

Pack, who is also the co-founder and vice president of The Dolphin Institute, and his research team made the determination after studying courting humpback whales for five consecutive years in the waters of the Auau, Kalohi and Pailolo channels off West Maui.

In winter and spring months, the whales assemble on shallow banks and along coastal areas for breeding and calving.

Since females produce a single calf every two to three years on average, and not all females migrate to breeding grounds, males usually far outnumber females at the sites.

Interested males serve as “escorts” for their female of choice, swimming in close proximity to her and, if present, her calf.

The males all gravitated to the largest females, sometimes engaging in dangerous fights to win and maintain the coveted escort position.

“The principal escort’s defensive behaviors include visual displays, such as lunging through the water with ventral throat grooves expanded, making the whale look visually larger, to screens of bubbles expelled from the blowhole or mouth, to chases and physical strikes, sometimes drawing blood from a rival,” Pack explained.

The researchers next measured each whale using both a hand-held sonar device and mathematical calculations based on angle of view and distance.

The scientists even donned snorkeler gear and swam around, and underneath, the courting whales.

Fitness appears to be behind the whales’ fondness for fat and long bodies, since the researchers also discovered that the largest females also produced the biggest calves.

Since whales depend upon stored body fat to support their metabolic requirements, particularly during the winter, the extra heft is necessary for their survival, promoting greater reproductive success and aiding females in the nursing of their offspring. (ANI)

Humans may reach ‘top of the shark menu’ if fishing is not controlled, says expert

Wellington, Jan 12 (ANI): If fishing in Australian waters is not brought under control, humans might soon be heading the menu for sharks, according to a shark expert.

Vic Hislop has warned that most beliefs about shark attacks on humans are wrong and very soon they might become the favourite prey for the ocean dwelling beasts.

He said that over-fishing in the Australian waters for the past 200 years has led big sharks to target upon “gentler” preys like dugong, turtles and dolphins.

“That’s what’s in their stomach now every day,” The NZPA quoted him as telling Macquarie Radio.

He added: “As the turtles disappear, which is inevitable, and the dugong herds disappear, humans are next in line on the food chain. It will definitely get worse.”

Hislop stressed that while humans make for tasty morsels to sharks, they manage to escape because they’re smarter.

“Don’t ever believe this rubbish about ‘they take a bite, they don’t like humans’. That is just so wrong. They take a bite and wait for their victim to bleed to death to finish them off. And that’s why we escape,” he said.

He explained that marine animals bitten by sharks panicked, swam around and bled to death, before the shark moved in again to devour them.

However, he said that the human defence mechanisms would eventually fail against the shark.

“The big sharks only lose a few people then they get good at it,” said Hislop.

In his opinion, hitting a shark on the nose or trying to poke one in the eye to fight off an attack, is not an effective mechanism and won’t make a shark to release a victim.

“You can get 10 of the biggest men in Australia with sledgehammers and you will not hurt them. You won’t even faze them,” said Hislop.

He said that with the advent of commercial fishing levels and the protection of great white sharks, might lead to more attacks on humans.

“Common sense tells you that you cannot keep fishing out the oceans and protect the end of the food chain. You’re heading for disaster,” said Hislop. (ANI)