A study on wild baboons finds they fail the mirror test, raising new questions about self-recognition in animals.
In a lab test, chimps and orangutans can recognize their own reflection. But in the wild, baboons seemingly can’t do the same.
A study published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, found that while the baboons noticed and responded to a laser mark ...
Fascinating study reveals the self-awareness of wild baboons. Learn how scientists tested whether baboons can recognize ...
Wild baboons failed to demonstrate visual self-recognition in a test carried out by anthropologists at UCL.
A few things come to mind when we imagine the alpha male type. They're the ones calling the shots, who get all the girls. But ...
A new study confirms that wild baboons do not recognize themselves in mirrors, reinforcing previous research on monkey ...
Wild baboons failed to demonstrate visual self-recognition in a test carried out by anthropologists. Published today in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the study found that while the baboons ...
A groundbreaking study has confirmed that wild baboons do not recognize themselves in mirrors, adding to evidence that ...
The more time alpha males spend guarding mates, the higher their stress hormones rise and the more their energy reserves ...
Research on male baboons reveals that alpha males face higher energetic costs and chronic stress, challenging assumptions about dominance and well-being.
The first evidence pointing to the unique daily problems faced by alpha male baboons arrived in 2011, when Gesquiere and ...