In Sweden they have trained wild crows to trade cigarette butts for peanuts, helping to clean up Swedish streets.
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In Sweden they have trained wild crows to trade cigarette butts for peanuts, helping to clean up Swedish streets.
The post In Sweden they have trained wild crows… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
A special vending machine was created to see whether crows are smart enough to use it. They are.
The post A special vending machine was… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
A special vending machine was created to see whether crows are smart enough to use it. They are.
The post A special vending machine was… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
If you’ve read about crows or other members of the corvid family, there can be no doubt in your mind these birds are smart.
Super smart. Scary smart.
Until now, though, scientists have assumed there still remained a gap between primates and every other sort of living being, and that had to do with the way our consciousness works.
Researchers, though, are becoming increasingly convinced that the minds of crows work more like our own than we probably want to believe.
A new study has shown that crows possess some degree of subjective experience and sensory consciousness – and not only that, they’re able to display consciousness despite not having a cerebral cortex. That’s the part of the primate brain scientists have long considered necessary for achieving this sort of higher intelligence.
Sensory consciousness involves being able to have a subjective experience, access it, and respond to it – which is exactly what researchers at the University of Tubingen claim to have proven.
For their study, researchers trained two carrion crows to move their heads in response to seeing different colored marks on a screen. Using implanted electrodes, they were able to record the activity of individual neurons, and were able to show that the nerve cells in the bird’s brains were influenced by their subjective experience and the way they reported their answers.
They weren’t, in layman’s terms, responding instinctively to the brightness of the colors, but were responding to their own internal assessment of those colors.
Andreas Nieder, one of the study’s authors, expounded in a statement.
“Nerve cells that represent visual input without subjective components are expected to respond in the same way to a visual stimulus of constant intensity.
Our results however conclusively show that nerve cells at higher processing levels of the crow’s brain are influenced by subjective experience, or more precisely produce subjective experiences.”
Their results are challenging many long-held beliefs about the nature of consciousness, Professor Nieder told IFLScience.
“I think the results of our study open up a new way of looking at the evolution of awareness and its neurobiological constraints.
It becomes more likely that also other animals on different branches of the tree of life, and with brains that strikingly differ from ours, also have sensory consciousness.”
Another recently published study supports this, finding similar sensory connections being made in the brains of owls and pigeons.
Which is all to say, not only are birds probably smarter than we’ve ever thought, they’re actually more intelligent, as well.
No matter how small their brains are, they’re definitely making the most of the headspace.
What do you think about this news? Have you always suspected that our fine, feathered friends have more going on upstairs than we previously thought?
Let us know your POV in the comments!
The post Researchers Believe Crows Have at Least as Much Self-Awareness as Humans appeared first on UberFacts.
Research finds that crows know what they know and can ponder the content of their own minds, a manifestation of higher intelligence and analytical thought long believed the sole province of humans and a few other higher mammals.
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In 1949 farmers blew up 1000 Acres of Wetlands in an attempt to kill 1000s of crows. The crows moved their Roost Prior to detonation, killing none.
Theme parks all tend to have a few elements in common – plenty of rides, souvenir shops, food stalls, and, of course, an abundance of birds hopping around trying to pick up any food that falls to the ground.
Now, Puy du Fou, a theme park in Les Epesses, France, has decided that if birds are going to be hanging around begging for leftover popcorn and discarded funnel cakes, they might as well earn their keep. To that end, they’ve trained a small contingent of rooks as staff – they get paid in treats to clean up garbage and cigarette butts from the grounds.
Rooks are in the same family of birds as ravens and crows, highly intelligent and trainable animals. The ones at Puy du Fou pick up litter and place it in a bin in exchange for a treat – the team of 6 birds have been working hard since August 13.
It sounds a bit out there, but the amusement park is far from the first company to give it a go. Dutch startup Crowded Cities started training crows to gather cigarette butts using a vending machine-like device that offers peanuts in exchange for trash, and the experiment is going well.
If it continues to work with no detrimental effects to the crows (from handling tobacco), we could see a broader implementation of the idea worldwide – maybe nature can help us clean up nature, even though we’re the ones who soiled it in the first place.
The post This French Theme Park Trained Some Crows to Keep the Place Clean appeared first on UberFacts.
Crows in urban Japan and the United States have innovated a technique to crack hard-shelled nuts by dropping them onto crosswalks and letting them be run over and cracked by cars. Then they retrieve the cracked nuts when the cars are stopped at the red light. 00
Eight-year-old Gabi Mann of Seattle, Washington receives gifts from crows in her garden. She feeds the crows regularly and little “treasures” are given in return including a miniature silver ball, a black button, a blue paper clip, a yellow bead, a blue Lego piece, and a pearl colored heart. 00
When a crow dies, the other crows investigate if there’s a threat where the death occurred, so they can avoid it in the future.