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Blindfolded Dolphins Can 'See,' Mimic Each Other Perfectly (VIDEO)

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/25/11 03:15 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

Blindfolded Dolphin

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GRASSY KEY, Fla. (AP) — In a lagoon in the Florida Keys, trainer Emily Guarino blindfolds a male dolphin named Tanner with special latex goggles. "You ready, Tanner?" Guarino asks the young dolphin, waiting beside his companion Kibby.

At a command, another trainer gets Kibby to say 'hello' by flapping his fins on the water, splashing noisily in the enclosed lagoon at the Dolphin Research Center here, which houses 22 dolphins and is one of the leaders in dolphin cognitive studies.

"Can you imitate what Kibby is doing?" Guarino asks Tanner. Within seconds, Tanner is splashing "hello" – a seemingly extraordinary feat given the blindfolded dolphin appears to only be using sound to perceive and imitate the actions of his fellow dolphin.

It turns out dolphins are master imitators that somehow can "see" their environment despite blindfolds. But exactly how such a dolphin can mimic another's action is a matter of ongoing scientific study.

Dr. Kelly Jaakkola, director of the nonprofit marine mammal research center, said the research to better understand dolphin intelligence will surely help further their conservation. She said such study may also be helpful in better grasping the complexities of human intelligence.

"It's human nature to care more about animals we perceive as intelligent. So the more we can showcase that intelligence we give people a way to connect, to care and therefore conserve," she said.

Just how blindfolded dolphins can pick up on the actions of other dolphins – whether through echolocation, sonar or other means – is still unclear. Echolocation refers to the sounds dolphins and other animals naturally emit to locate objects and navigate.

"Dolphins have this ability to echolocate by sonar, very similar to bats. And so one possibility is he is echolocating on that and he is 'seeing' the behavior with sound," Jaakkola said. "However there is another possibility as well. Maybe he's recognizing the characteristic sound of the behavior like if I asked you to close your eyes and I clap my hands, you would still be able to imitate that by recognizing the characteristic sound."

The study used three dolphins for its tests: Tanner was always the blindfolded subject and A.J. and Kibby served as demonstrator dolphins. The study titled "Blindfolded Imitation in a Bottlenose Dolphin" is published in the International Journal of Comparative Psychology (Volume 23, No. 4).

Tanner, who was previously trained in wearing the opaque latex eyecups, already knew how to imitate other dolphins' behaviors without blindfolds on. Nearly every time his eyes were covered, Tanner was able to imitate his playmate Kibby's actions, the researchers reported.

The study tested 19 motor and eight vocal behaviors, from waving a fin, to bobbing up and down, to spinning and even giggling. Training took numerous trials and, at first, involved only one eye cup used to blindfold Tanner. Researchers then moved on gradually to two eyecups. After the trials, trainers and researchers tested each behavior twice while Tanner was sighted and blindfolded. The study was spread over 19 sessions in 11 weeks.

Since researchers sought to focus on whether dolphins can imitate companions while blindfolded, all the behaviors used in the study were already known to the dolphins.

Previous dolphin studies have shown dolphins can copy companion's whistles and motor behaviors, as well as computer-generated sounds. Dolphins also have a capacity to copy humans to some extent, according to Jaakkola.

The results are not at all surprising to Dr. Robin W. Baird, a research biologist at Cascadia Research Collective based in Olympia, Wash.

"This actually demonstrates that they are able to know what is going on in their environment at a different level than what they can just see," said Baird, who works mostly with wild sea animals – such as dolphins, whales and seals – and did not participate in the study.

Janet Mann, a professor of biology and psychology at Georgetown University, read the study but wasn't involved in the research and said it's still unclear if Tanner was echolocating or one of the other dolphins.

"They didn't localize who was echolocating, so we could not rule out that it was the model and not Tanner," she said. She also said the authors didn't consider so-called "kinesthetic cues."

"That is, if someone was twirling in the water next to you, then you might be able to tell by the water movement that they were twirling or could feel the bubbles if they were kicking away from you," she added.

It was the same question raised with Clever Hans, a horse which in the late 19th century in Germany was said to be able to spell or solve any math problem by stomping his hoof with the answer. Later studies determined the horse was receiving unintentional cues from the questioners.

As for dolphins, researchers say they are intent on learning much more about their nature. For one, they want to know if dolphins imitate each other naturally to learn something new. Researchers also say they want to further test whether dolphins can imitate a novel behavior in the playful, thought-provoking animals.

At the end of one recent demonstration, Tanner and Kibby swim off side by side, zipping through the water to the far side of the long lagoon. There they playfully leap five times, their jumps coordinated in a synchronized tandem, before they return to their trainers to be rewarded with a fish treat.

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(Scroll down for video) GRASSY KEY, Fla. (AP) — In a lagoon in the Florida Keys, trainer Emily Guarino blindfolds a male dolphin named Tanner with special latex goggles. "You ready, Tanner?" Gu...
(Scroll down for video) GRASSY KEY, Fla. (AP) — In a lagoon in the Florida Keys, trainer Emily Guarino blindfolds a male dolphin named Tanner with special latex goggles. "You ready, Tanner?" Gu...
 
 
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10:50 AM on 01/27/2011
Ridiculous and completely pointless. Leave these friggin' animals alone already!
08:44 PM on 01/26/2011
But if we blindfolded some GOP could they still mimic the others?
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Ampoliros
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
06:23 PM on 01/26/2011
I have to say this seems pretty ridiculous to me. Its like if aliens came down and put earplugs on us and said asked us to imitate another person. We're vision oriented. It seems crazy that a Dolphin 'trainer' would consider them to be visual oriented. Everything we know about them screams that they are audio oriented.

How about we get back to building meaningful means of communication with these extremely intelligent creatures instead of making them into sideshows. Or does that step on the creationists' toes too much?
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
03:16 PM on 01/26/2011
They do a pretty spot on Jimmy Stewart too.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
08:42 PM on 01/25/2011
News? Dolphins are known to create 3d images using their sonar. They can also communicate those 3d images via their language. Dolphins have bigger brains, more neurons, faster neurons, and more folds in the cerebral cortex. Figure it out.
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Karen Lenard
06:12 PM on 01/25/2011
Why do we insist on projecting our human perceptions onto animals, mammals....space?! Maybe they've memorized how many splashes of the water spells hello. They can still hear. Gee. Busy work.
01:59 AM on 01/26/2011
It makes them cuter, thus more profitable? Busy work indeed.
unique
Animal lover forever
05:29 PM on 01/25/2011
Anyone read "Ecowar."

It is excellent about Dolphins.
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anti politricks
better to light 1 candle than curse darkness
10:41 AM on 01/26/2011
please provide a link or author, i'm having troubles finding this book on the web
unique
Animal lover forever
03:20 PM on 01/26/2011
Sorry,
Ecowar by Richard P. Henrick
Excellent.
unique
Animal lover forever
03:26 PM on 01/26/2011
Ecowar by Richard J. Henrick , Copyright 1993
Harper Paperbacks Catalog Request
10 East 53rd Street
New York, N.Y. 10022
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
05:28 PM on 01/25/2011
Awwww, I want a dolphin :)
05:17 PM on 01/25/2011
What I find impressive that a dolphin can understand the request to "imitate what Kibby is doing?" !!
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Bertski
just a guy trying not to be part of the problem
11:32 PM on 01/25/2011
Great point! It's more incredible that the dolphin can grasp the concept of mimicry and understand the request than that it can mimic another dolphin while blindfolded 50% of the time. I'm curious about the other 50% of the attempts, as well. What were the incorrect responses? In other words, were they misinterpretations, or incorrect "guesses?"
02:00 AM on 01/26/2011
Or maybe the dolphin just wants more fish and missing the signal copies the other "student".
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SmolderingRuin
"All governments lie!" I.F. Stone
03:34 AM on 01/26/2011
That was my first thought. Did they discuss it earlier or what?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:04 PM on 01/25/2011
You know what? Dolphins do it with sound.
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Cheyla
04:56 PM on 01/25/2011
These enslaved dolphins should be rehabilitated and returned to their homes in the Ocean - dolphins should have a non-human person status
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ebanks84
Grandma knows best!
05:28 PM on 01/25/2011
Why? Cause you say so?
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
08:43 PM on 01/25/2011
Because they may be smarter and more couscous than humans. Is that enough?
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anti politricks
better to light 1 candle than curse darkness
10:42 AM on 01/26/2011
sometimes we should just respect and accept. we don't need to know everything :)
unique
Animal lover forever
05:30 PM on 01/25/2011
Agreed. Read Ecowar.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
08:44 PM on 01/25/2011
FF!
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anti politricks
better to light 1 candle than curse darkness
10:24 AM on 01/26/2011
author please
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04:56 PM on 01/25/2011
Hm, well. If you are in the water and so close to the other dolphin you can feel the water, the shape of the waves,the change of the wave patterns and guess:) that's easy. Cute though:) and I might be wrong.
04:48 PM on 01/25/2011
See The Cove - let all of these intelligent beings go to live their life free!
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Ampoliros
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
06:24 PM on 01/26/2011
No kidding. Talk about an eye opener.
04:46 PM on 01/25/2011
My guess is that the blindfolded dolphin simply asked the other what he was doing...
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janie@atthelake
Keep Austin Weird
04:43 PM on 01/25/2011
Why the hell are they doing this?
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07:12 PM on 01/25/2011
Because they are getting paid. So much so-called "research" on other living beings is unnecessary, redundant, cruel and just plain stupid. Leave them alone, and not in the tank which is like a bathtub to them, but free to live as they were meant to, in the ocean.
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Bertski
just a guy trying not to be part of the problem
11:33 PM on 01/25/2011
Simplest answer: Because they can.