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Main » 2010 » March » 6 » Dolphin Cognitive Abilities Raise Ethical Questions, Says Emory Neuroscientist
1:18 PM Dolphin Cognitive Abilities Raise Ethical Questions, Says Emory Neuroscientist |
Emory University neuroscientist Lori Marino will speak on the
anatomical basis of dolphin intelligence at the American Association
for the Advancement of Science conference (AAAS) in San Diego.
"Many modern dolphin brains are significantly larger than our own
and second in mass to the human brain when corrected for body size,"
Marino says. A leading expert in the neuroanatomy of dolphins and whales, Marino
will appear as part of a panel discussing these findings and their
ethical and policy implications. Some dolphin brains exhibit features correlated with complex
intelligence, she says, including a large expanse of neocortical volume
that is more convoluted than our own, extensive insular and cingulated
regions, and highly differentiated cellular regions. "Dolphins are sophisticated, self-aware, highly intelligent beings
with individual personalities, autonomy and an inner life. They are
vulnerable to tremendous suffering and psychological trauma," Marino
says. The growing industry of capturing and confining dolphins to perform
in marine parks or to swim with tourists at resorts needs to be
reconsidered, she says. "Our current knowledge of dolphin brain complexity and intelligence
suggests that these practices are potentially psychologically harmful
to dolphins and present a misinformed picture of their natural
intellectual capacities," Marino says. Marino worked on a 2001 study that showed that dolphins can
recognize themselves in a mirror - a finding that indicates
self-awareness similar to that seen in higher primates and elephants.
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