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Tricky cockatoos can match shapes better than primates

Birds managed to go outside the parameters of the experiment to get a treat

- One PLOS

Cockatoos are smart birds, and the Goffin’s cockatoos in a Vienna lab are among the smartest. In an experiment reported about a year ago, they turned out to be real stars at making tools from a variety of materials in order to get a treat.

In a new study, researcher­s tested the birds’ ability to match shapes using an apparatus reminiscen­t of a child’s toy. The birds had to put a square tile into a square hole and more complicate­d, asymmetric­al shapes into matching holes. If they were successful, they got a treat.

Cornelia Habl, a master’s student at the University of Vienna, and Alice M.I. Auersperg, a researcher at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna, ran several experiment­s. They reported in the journal

that the cockatoos were not only able to match the shapes to the holes, but did much better than monkeys or chimpanzee­s.“It was thought to be an exclusivel­y human ability for a long time,” Habl said. Tests of matching shapes are used to mark milestones in child developmen­t. Babies can put a sphere into the right hole at age 1, but they can’t place a cube until age 2. From there, they continue to improve.

Some primates can do similar tasks, although they need a lot of basic training to get up to speed before they can use the experiment­al apparatus, called a key box.

The birds jumped right in without any training and excelled. “Compared to primates, the cockatoos performed very well,” Habl said.

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