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Temple Gradin discusses animals that show unique perceptions and intelligence, including seizure response dogs and Clever Hans the horse. Seizure response dogs can detect invisible signs of an impending seizure in people before it occurs through their extreme perceptions. Clever Hans was able to answer mathematical questions but was actually just detecting human cues rather than counting. Both seizure response dogs and Clever Hans acquired their skills without direct human training, which Temple Gradin argues shows signs of high animal intelligence.
Temple Gradin discusses animals that show unique perceptions and intelligence, including seizure response dogs and Clever Hans the horse. Seizure response dogs can detect invisible signs of an impending seizure in people before it occurs through their extreme perceptions. Clever Hans was able to answer mathematical questions but was actually just detecting human cues rather than counting. Both seizure response dogs and Clever Hans acquired their skills without direct human training, which Temple Gradin argues shows signs of high animal intelligence.
Temple Gradin discusses animals that show unique perceptions and intelligence, including seizure response dogs and Clever Hans the horse. Seizure response dogs can detect invisible signs of an impending seizure in people before it occurs through their extreme perceptions. Clever Hans was able to answer mathematical questions but was actually just detecting human cues rather than counting. Both seizure response dogs and Clever Hans acquired their skills without direct human training, which Temple Gradin argues shows signs of high animal intelligence.
EXTREME PERCEPTION AND ANIMAL INTELLIGENCE , author Temple Gradin
discusses the controversy that there are animals that show unique traits to be aware of their surroundings. One case is the seizure respond dogs; they are animals that are trained to help people when a seizure is happening. These dogs acquire extreme perceptions that allow them to predict seizures before it starts, seizure alert dogs display this behavior. They can fathom and recognize the invisible signs of a seizure. Temple Grandin states, ''These dogs are showing superior intelligence the same way a human.'' Another case is with Wilhelm Von Osten whose horse, Clever Hans, apparently was able to count and answer mathematical questions, it is the other case of true cognition. He discerned between different alternatives to answer to his questioners. Oskar Pfungst, a psychologist, showed that he was not counting, he only detected human signs to answer. ''Clever Hans wasn't trained by someone, but he just trained himself to read human cues,'' Temple Gradin mentions, '' What makes Hans similar to seizure alert dogs is that both Hans and the dogs acquired their skills without human help.'' Temple Gradin concludes, ''What makes the actions of the seizure alert dogs, and probably of Hans, too, a sign of high intelligence.''