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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
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    that makes them
    some of the most social, creative
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    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 or 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 it's 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 long-term 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, it's 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 of 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, there is an elephant band.
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    But perhaps the most amazing thing
    about elephants
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    is a 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
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    have usually occurred right after
    massive poachings or cullings,
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    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 Donne
    described as "nature's great masterpiece"
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    does not vanish from the world's canvas.
Title:
Why elephants never forget - Alex Gendler
Speaker:
Alex Gendler
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-elephants-never-forget-alex-gendler

It’s a common saying that elephants never forget. But the more we learn about elephants, the more it appears that their impressive memory is only one aspect of an incredible intelligence that makes them some of the most social, creative, and benevolent creatures on Earth. Alex Gendler takes us into the incredible, unforgettable mind of an elephant.

Lesson by Alex Gendler, animation by Avi Ofer.

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

English subtitles

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