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After seeing the same number of objects repeatedly in different-looking groups, infants notice when the number of objects is changed, they found. So, too, do macaques. Indeed, college students and macaques seem equally able to roughly sum up sets of objects without actually counting them. That abiliity can be useful to the macaques in determining whether there is enough food to remain in an area or to get a sense of how large their group is compared to competing groups. They are currently working to see if monkeys can recognize the concept of zero. Some people may be uneasy as new studies find increasing similarities between animal and human mental abilities, Wasserman said. The aim is to learn how much thinking ability is general throughout the animal kingdom, he said, "the evidence that we collect constantly surprises us." ___ On the Net: AAAS: http://www.aaas.org/
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