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Why elephants never forget - Alex Gendler

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    It's a common saying that elephants
    never forget,
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    but these magnificent animals are more
    than giant walking hard drives.
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    The more we learn about elephants,
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    the more it appears that
    their impressive memory
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    is only one aspect of an incredible
    intelligence that makes them
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    some of the most social, creative
    and benevolent creatures on Earth.
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    Unlike many proverbs, the one about
    elephant memory
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    is scientifically accurate.
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    Elephants know every member in
    their herd,
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    able to recognize as many as 30
    companions by sight our smell.
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    This is a great help when migrating,
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    or encountering
    other potentially hostile elephants.
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    They also remember and distinguish
    particular cues that signal danger
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    and can recall important locations long
    after their last visit.
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    But its the memories unrelated to
    survival that are the most fascinating.
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    Elephants remember not only their
    herd companions,
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    but other creatures who have made a
    strong impression on them.
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    In one case, two circus elephants that had
    briefly performed together
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    rejoiced when crossing paths
    23 years later.
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    This recognition isn't limited to others
    of their species.
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    Elephants have also recognized humans
    they've bonded with after decades apart.
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    All of this shows that elephant memory
    goes beyond responses to stimuli.
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    Looking inside their heads,
    we can see why.
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    The elephant boasts the largest brain of
    any land mammal,
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    as well as an impressive
    encephalization quotient.
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    This is the size of the brain
    relative to what we'd expect
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    for an animal's body size,
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    and the elephants EQ is nearly as high
    as a chimpanzee's.
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    And despite the distant relation,
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    convergent evolution has made it
    remarkably similar to the human brain,
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    with as many neurons and synapses,
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    and a highly developed hippocampus
    and cerebral cortex.
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    It is the hippocampus strongly associated
    with emotion that aides recollection
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    by encoding important experiences
    into longterm memories.
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    The ability to distinguish this importance
    makes elephant memory
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    a complex and adaptable faculty
    beyond rote memorization.
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    It's what allows elephants who survived
    a drought in their youth
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    to recognize its warning signs
    in adulthood,
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    which is why clans with older matriarchs
    have higher survival rates.
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    Unfortunately, its also what makes
    elephants one of the few non-human animals
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    to suffer from post traumatic
    stress disorder.
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    The cerebral cortex, on the other hand,
    enables problem solving,
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    which elephants display
    in many creative ways.
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    They also tackle problems cooperatively,
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    sometimes even outwitting the researchers
    and manipulating their partners.
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    And they've grasped basic arithmetic,
    keeping track of the relative amounts
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    of fruit in two baskets
    after multiple changes.
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    The rare combination or memory
    and problem solving
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    can explain some of elephants most
    clever behaviors,
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    but it doesn't explain some of the things
    we're just beginning to learn
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    about their mental lives.
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    Elephants communicate using everything
    from body signals and vocalizations,
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    to infrared rumbles that can be heard
    kilometers away.
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    And their understanding of syntax suggests
    they have their own language and grammar.
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    This sense of language may even go beyond
    simple communication.
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    Elephants create art by carefully
    choosing and combining
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    different colors and elements.
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    They can also recognize twelve distinct
    tones of music, and recreate melodies.
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    And yes, their is an elephant band.
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    But perhaps the most amazing thing
    about elephants
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    is the capacity even more important
    than cleverness:
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    their sense of empathy, altruism
    and justice.
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    Elephants are the only non-human
    animals to mourn their dead,
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    performing burial rituals and returning
    to visit graves.
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    They have shown concern for
    other species, as well.
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    One working elephant refused to
    set a log down into a hole
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    where a dog was sleeping,
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    while elephants encountering injured
    humans have sometimes stood guard,
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    and gently comforted them
    with their trunk.
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    On the other hand, elephant attacks on
    human villages have usually occurred
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    right after massive poachings or callings,
    suggesting deliberate revenge.
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    When we consider all this evidence,
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    along with the fact that elephants are one
    of the few species
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    who can recognize themselves in a mirror,
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    it's hard to escape the conclusion
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    that they are conscious,
    intelligent and emotional beings.
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    Unfortunately, humanity's treatment of
    elephants does not reflect this,
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    as they continue to suffer from habitat
    destruction in Asia,
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    ivory poaching in Africa,
    and mistreatment in captivity worldwide.
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    Given when we now know about elephants,
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    and what they continue to teach us
    about animal intelligence,
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    it is more important than ever to ensure
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    that what the English poet
    John Dunn described as
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    "nature's great masterpiece,"
    does not vanish from the world's canvas.
Title:
Why elephants never forget - Alex Gendler
Speaker:
Alex Gendler
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:23

English subtitles

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