Ai (chimpanzee)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ai
Specieschimpanzee
Bornc. 1976 (age 47–48)
Guinean Forests of West Africa
OffspringAyumu (chimpanzee)

Ai (born in 1976, estimated) is a female western chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes verus),[1] currently living at the Primate Research Institute of Kyoto University (acronym KUPRI). She is the first subject of the Ai project, a research program started in 1978 by Kiyoko Murofushi and Tetsuro Matsuzawa which is aimed at understanding chimpanzee cognition through computer interface experiments.[2]

Biography[edit]

Ai was born in 1976 (estimated), in the Guinean Forests of West Africa.[1] Born wild, Ai was soon taken into captivity and sold to KUPRI in 1977 by an animal trader (this type of sale became illegal in 1980 with Japan's ratification of CITES).[1] She was the first subject of KUPRI’s chimpanzee project, which was intended to become Japan’s first ape-language study in the vein of earlier ape-language studies.[2] Ai was joined at KUPRI the following year by two more chimpanzees, Akira and Mari.[3] In 2000, Ai gave birth to a son, Ayumu.

Ai Project[edit]

Matsuzawa has written that the difference between the Ai Project and earlier ape-language studies is that he was less interested in seeing if Ai and the other chimpanzees were capable of learning some degree of human language than trying to understand how chimpanzees perceive their surroundings.[2] To study this, the research team created a unique keyboard through which Ai and the other chimpanzees at KUPRI could interact with a computer –– the computer was used to standardize the studies and reduce variation that might be introduced by human researchers, and because the mechanism could be easily used in comparative studies on humans.[1] With this method, researchers have studied Ai’s memory, number-learning, and perception of color. Matsuzawa wrote that Ai was “the first chimpanzee who learned to use Arabic numerals to represent numbers,” and her ordering of different shades and hues of Munsell color chips was similar to human orderings.[2]

Group and living quarters[edit]

In 2000, not long after the birth of three chimpanzees, Ai's group numbered 15;[1] in 2010, there were 14 members.[4] This is similar to the size of some small chimpanzee groups in the wild, where in some places with stable food supplies group size hovers at around 20 chimpanzees.[5] Matsuzawa has attempted to blend elements of laboratory and field research, and KUPRI has an outdoor complex for the chimpanzees called the Ape Research Annex, built in 1995, with an 8-meter tall tower, a river, and trees.[3]

After Ai gave birth to her son, Ayumu, in 2000, they were placed in a “twin booth” where Ayumu could live with Ai in one booth but also be exposed to the researcher in the other booth every day, making the researcher an integral part of Ayumu’s life and studying him in front of Ai, with her implicit approval.[6] Matsuzawa wrote that:

Two almost identical booths are placed side by side. There is a door between the two booths that can alternately be opened to connect the two areas, closed to separate the two individuals, or positioned half-open to allow the young chimpanzee to crawl from one area to the other while preventing the mother chimpanzee from entering the neighboring booth.[6]

This method allowed the research team to consistently track Ayumu's development without interfering excessively with the mother-offspring relationship.

Art[edit]

Ai loves to paint and draw –– she started drawing at a young age –– and is often brought art materials for free-drawing or painting.[6] She creates art as an end in itself, without a food reward. In 2013 she made a painting that was given to the president of Kyoto University; later, in honor of the 40th anniversary of her arrival at KUPRI, this painting was made into a silk scarf and given as a gift to Jane Goodall.[6]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Matsuzawa, Tetsuro (2003-12-01). "The Ai project: historical and ecological contexts". Animal Cognition. 6 (4): 199–211. doi:10.1007/s10071-003-0199-2. ISSN 1435-9448. PMID 14566577. S2CID 8928490.
  2. ^ a b c d Matsuzawa, Tetsuro (October 2009). "The chimpanzee mind: in search of the evolutionary roots of the human mind". Animal Cognition. 12 (S1): S1-9. doi:10.1007/s10071-009-0277-1. ISSN 1435-9448. PMID 19727864. S2CID 7028415.
  3. ^ a b "Ai | Chimpanzee Ai | Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University". langint.pri.kyoto-u.ac.jp. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  4. ^ "Thinking Like a Chimpanzee". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  5. ^ Neal Webb, Sarah J.; Hau, Jann; Schapiro, Steven J. (January 2019). "Does group size matter? Captive chimpanzee ( Pan troglodytes ) behavior as a function of group size and composition". American Journal of Primatology. 81 (1): e22947. doi:10.1002/ajp.22947. PMC 6472487. PMID 30620093.
  6. ^ a b c d Matsuzawa, Tetsuro (April 2017). "The 40th anniversary of the Ai Project: the commemorative gift is a silk scarf painted by Ai the chimpanzee". Primates. 58 (2): 261–265. doi:10.1007/s10329-017-0604-0. ISSN 0032-8332. PMID 28293756. S2CID 3635041.

External links[edit]