Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword, by Louis J. Moses
- Acknowledgments
- Note added in proof
- Part I Comparative and Developmental Approaches to Self-awareness
- Part II The Development of Self in Human Infants and Children
- Part III Self-awareness in Great Apes
- 11 Social and cognitive factors in chimpanzee and gorilla mirror behavior and self-recognition
- 12 The comparative and developmental study of self-recognition and imitation: The importance of social factors
- 13 Shadows and mirrors: Alternative avenues to the development of self-recognition in chimpanzees
- 14 Symbolic representation of possession in a chimpanzee
- 15 Self-awareness in bonobos and chimpanzees: A comparative perspective
- 16 me chantek: The development of self-awareness in a signing orangutan
- 17 Self-recognition and self-awareness in lowland gorillas
- 18 How to create self-recognizing gorillas (but don't try it on macaques)
- 19 Incipient mirror self-recognition in zoo gorillas and chimpanzees
- 20 Do gorillas recognize themselves on television?
- Part IV Mirrors and Monkeys, Dolphins, and Pigeons
- Part V Epilogue
- Author index
- Subject index
14 - Symbolic representation of possession in a chimpanzee
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword, by Louis J. Moses
- Acknowledgments
- Note added in proof
- Part I Comparative and Developmental Approaches to Self-awareness
- Part II The Development of Self in Human Infants and Children
- Part III Self-awareness in Great Apes
- 11 Social and cognitive factors in chimpanzee and gorilla mirror behavior and self-recognition
- 12 The comparative and developmental study of self-recognition and imitation: The importance of social factors
- 13 Shadows and mirrors: Alternative avenues to the development of self-recognition in chimpanzees
- 14 Symbolic representation of possession in a chimpanzee
- 15 Self-awareness in bonobos and chimpanzees: A comparative perspective
- 16 me chantek: The development of self-awareness in a signing orangutan
- 17 Self-recognition and self-awareness in lowland gorillas
- 18 How to create self-recognizing gorillas (but don't try it on macaques)
- 19 Incipient mirror self-recognition in zoo gorillas and chimpanzees
- 20 Do gorillas recognize themselves on television?
- Part IV Mirrors and Monkeys, Dolphins, and Pigeons
- Part V Epilogue
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Introduction
Self-recognition in nonhuman primates is often equated with mirror selfrecognition (Anderson, 1984; Gallup, 1970; Itakura, 1987a,b; Povinelli, 1987). Nevertheless, for humans, “it is the ability to recognize and respond to self independent of contingency which represents the important developmental milestone in self-recognition” (Lewis & Brooks-Gunn, 1979b, p. 218). Human children begin to recognize their contingent-independent image in photographs only after mirror self-recognition (MSR), with most children at 22 months of age correctly labeling a photograph of themselves among photographs of other infants, and some infants doing so as early as 16 months (Lewis & Brooks-Gunn, 1979a, p. 12). The recognition of a contingency independent self in photographs is relatively unstudied in primates (but see Miles, SAAH16; Patterson & Cohn, SAAH17). The only previous instance described is open to interpretation: The sign-using chimpanzee Lucy, after observing an image of herself and her cat (which had died three months previously), signed “Lucy's cat, Lucy's cat” repeatedly for ten minutes as she stared at the picture (Temerlin, 1977).
This instance suggests not only that Lucy recognized her own image and her cat's, but also that she viewed the cat as her own – as a possession. Although possession in nonhuman primates has been studied in the context of control over objects (Kummer, 1973; Thierry, Wunderlich, & Gueth, 1989; Torii, 1975), there is no evidence that possession in these primates is mediated by a self-concept or a concept of the other, such that they view these objects as symbolically representing themselves or another.
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- Self-Awareness in Animals and HumansDevelopmental Perspectives, pp. 241 - 247Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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