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| The avian brain is smaller than that of many mammals, but just as capable. Photo Credit: Kevin Mueller |
Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum explain how it is possible for the small brains of pigeons, parrots and corvids to perform equally well as those of mammals, despite their significant differences.
Since the late 19th century, it has been a common belief among researchers that high intelligence requires the high computing capacity of large brains. They also discovered that the cerebral cortex as typical of mammals, is necessary to analyze and link information in great detail. Avian brains, by contrast, are very small and lack any structure resembling a cortex. Nevertheless, scientists showed that parrots and corvids are capable of planning for the future, forging social strategies, recognizing themselves in the mirror and building tools. These and similar aptitudes put them on a par with chimpanzees. Even less gifted birds, such as pigeons, learn orthographic rules that enable them to recognize typos in short words or classify pictures according to categories such as “impressionism”, “water” or “man-made”. How do they do it with such small brains and without a cortex? With their article in Trends in Cognitive Science, Professor Onur Güntürkün, Dr. Roland Pusch and Professor Jonas Rose from Ruhr University Bochum come closer to solving this more than one hundred-year-old puzzle.







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