The aggressively cute competitors will vie for the Lombarky trophy as part of either Team Ruff or Team Fluff. The three-hour spectacle will include play-by-play commentary from sportscasters Steve ...
Researchers from Johns Hopkins University studying bonobos found that they would point to where treats were hidden if they could see their human partner didn’t know where they were, according to ...
A first-of-its-kind study suggests bonobos, like humans, can understand someone else’s lack of knowledge—and adjust their actions accordingly Margherita Bassi Daily Correspondent If someone is ...
Once familiar with the objective, the bonobos understood that they would get a treat if Townrow found it. The grape or Cheerio was hidden under one of three cups, so “where is it?” He asked them.
Roanoke Fire and EMS responded to a structure fire downtown on February 3.
A cooperation experiment shows for the first time that animals, as well as people, are capable of communicating new information to their companions Kanzi, a bonobo who was part of the experiment, is ...
Think about what you typically do on a walk. Do you listen to a podcast? Talk to yourself? Fret about your day? While there’s a time and a place for those types of strolls, if you’d like to ...
Now, a new study of bonobos adds to evidence that they might do the same thing. Specifically, some bonobos were more likely to point to the location of a treat when they knew that a human ...
So two researchers at Johns Hopkins, Luke Townrow and Christopher Krupenye, came up with a way of testing whether some of our closest living relatives, the bonobos, could infer the state of mind ...
Now, a new study of bonobos adds to evidence that they might do the same thing. Specifically, some bonobos were more likely to point to the location of a treat when they knew that a human companion ...
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