- Comparative Cognition
Comparative cognition IPA|/kəmˈperetɪv kɑ:ɡˈnɪʃɵn/ is the comparative study of the mechanisms and origins of
cognition in variousspecies . Work in this field is being used to more precisely determine the nature of our own cognition and also to help achieve more rigorous determinations of whatindividual rights non-human species should be afforded.The justness of the current rights of the great apes, particularly, are being questioned as their cause is championed by the
Great Ape Project . As the nature of our perceptions of individual rights and the role of intelligence and awareness in their determination are given more concrete bases, other species such as someporpoises , held in popular belief for some time as highly intelligent, will likely become of greater interest in this regard. Even some species ofbirds have demonstrated what could potentially beconceptualization of the minds of their competitors.From a biological point of view, work is being done on the brains of
fruit flies that should yield techniques precise enough to allow an understanding of the workings of the human brain on a scale appreciative of individual groups ofneurons rather than the more regional scale previously used. Similarly, gene activity in the humanbrain is better understood through examination of the brains of mice by the Seattle-basedAllen Institute for Brain Science (see link below), yielding the freely availableAllen Brain Atlas . This type of study is related to comparative cognition, but better classified as one ofcomparative genomics . Increasing emphasis inpsychology andethology on the biological aspects ofperception andbehavior is bridging the gap betweengenomics andbehavioral analysis .ee also
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Cognitive Science
*Animal cognition
*Animal Communication
*Evolutionary psychology External links
* [http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/animalmind/ "Nature: Inside the Animal Mind"]
* [http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/10/061030183310.htm Article on Empathy in Elephants]
* [http://www.apa.org/releases/baboonthought.html APA article on Abstract Thinking in Baboons]
* [http://www.apa.org/monitor/mar03/food.html APA article on Short Term Memory in Honeybees]
* [http://www.psych.ualberta.ca/research/ccb.php University of Alberta's Comparative Cognition and Behavior Page]
* [http://www.psychol.cam.ac.uk/ccl/ Comparative Cognition Lab at Cambridge University]
* [http://www.pigeon.psy.tufts.edu/ccs/default.htm The Comparative Cognition Society]
* [http://www.alleninstitute.org/ Allen Institute for Brain Science]
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