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"They have shown repeatedly amazing cognitive abilities," said study co-author Joel Fagot, a researcher at the French National Center for Scientific Research. Bill Hopkins, a professor of psychology at the Yerkes Primate Center in Atlanta, isn't surprised. "We tend to underestimate what their capacities are," said Hopkins, who wasn't part of the French research team. "Non-human primates are really specialized in the visual domain and this is an example of that." This raises interesting questions about how the complex primate mind works without language or what we think of as language, Hopkins said. While we use language to solve problems in our heads, such as deciphering words, it seems that baboons use a "remarkably sophisticated" method to attack problems without language, he said. Key to the success of the experiment was a change in the testing technique, the researchers said. The baboons weren't put in the computer stations and forced to take the test. Instead, they could choose when they wanted to work, going to one of the 10 computer booths at any time, even in the middle of the night. The most ambitious baboons test 3,000 times a day; the laziest only 400. The advantage of this type of experiment setup, which can be considered more humane, is that researchers get far more trials in a shorter time period, he said. "They come because they want to," Fagot said. "What do they want? They want some food. They want to solve some task." ___ Online: Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/
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