A new study shows a bonobo can track pretend juice and grapes, suggesting apes also have imagination, not only humans.
Given that bonobos are endangered in their home of the Democratic Republic of Congo, he added, “My hope is that that kind of ...
Overview  The trend feels personal because humans interpret symbolic outputs emotionally.AI predicts behavior patterns using ...
In A Nutshell Kanzi, a 43-year-old bonobo, successfully tracked pretend juice poured between empty cups, choosing the correct ...
In a series of tea party-like experiments, Johns Hopkins University researchers demonstrate for the first time that apes can ...
Watching proteins move as they drive the chemical reactions that sustain life is one of the grand challenges of modern ...
CCHR calls for a congressional audit of NIMH after decades of costly, brutal animal experiments, unpublished trials, and failed biomedical research, as U.S. suicide rates, disability, and psychiatric ...
Imagination may not be uniquely human. A new study shows an ape tracking pretend objects, reshaping ideas about cognition and evolution.
A perspective in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface argues that advances in AI, sensing technologies and modeling are ...
Will Saulsbery, an industry-leading A.I. marketer and strategist, and Mark Minevich, a globally recognized chief A.I. officer ...
A new study published in Communications Psychology suggests that artificial intelligence systems can be more effective than humans at establishing emotional closeness during deep conversations, ...