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jumpjack
10-01-2011, 12:34
Segnatevi questi nomi, perche' questi tizi si accingono a fare un esperimento tanto interessante quanto inquietante, se desse risultati positivi!

Diana Reiss of Hunter College in New York City, and collaborator Ofer Tchernichovski (http://ofer.sci.ccny.cuny.edu/) at the City College of New York .

Evidence of culture – learned behavior characteristics of a particular group – among animals is mounting, and research is continuing to add nuance to our understanding of how animals learn from one another and how animal culture, like human culture, evolves.

Within the next year, Diana Reiss of Hunter College in New York City, and collaborator Ofer Tchernichovski at the City College of New York plan to embark on research that could show, among other things, how dolphins learn new whistles – the sounds by which they communicate – and how they incorporate them into their own social interactions.
http://www.livescience.com/culture/top-science-breakthroughs-2011-101231.html

Pensate se si scoprisse che gli animali si tramandano insegnamenti da una generazione all'altra! :eek:

Ziosilvio
10-01-2011, 12:48
Cioè si vuole fare un esperimento sistematico su un fenomeno noto già da tempo?
O davvero pensiamo che la diffusione della conoscenza richieda la comunicazione verbale?

Oltretutto, se devi citare, cita con completezza:
Evidence of culture – learned behavior characteristics of a particular group – among animals is mounting, and research is continuing to add nuance to our understanding of how animals learn from one another and how animal culture, like human culture, evolves.

Within the next year, Diana Reiss of Hunter College in New York City, and collaborator Ofer Tchernichovski at the City College of New York plan to embark on research that could show, among other things, how dolphins learn new whistles – the sounds by which they communicate – and how they incorporate them into their own social interactions.

A new experimental system the two scientists are developing will allow a social group of dolphins at the National Aquarium in Baltimore to interact with a touch screen projected onto the wall of the tank, while identifying the whistles the animals make, in near-real time.

When asked if findings from animal culture mean humans are not unique in that regard, Tchernichovski balked, calling it a "trick question."

"The more interesting science is the science using animal models to understand ourselves and to understand animals and to see [if] there is a continuum between them," he told LiveScience.