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Book Review
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Volume 360:1467-1468 April 2, 2009 Number 14
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Alex and Me: How a Scientist and a Parrot Discovered a Hidden World of Animal Intelligence — And Formed a Deep Bond in the Process

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By Irene M. Pepperberg. 240 pp., illustrated. New York, Collins, 2008. $23.95 (cloth); $18.95 (e-book). ISBN 978-0-06-167247-7 (cloth); 978-0-06-171723-9 (e-book).

The question "What matter?" is put to Alex the parrot by animal behaviorist Irene Pepperberg, who wants him to differentiate among wood, paper, and wool. Forget for a moment that Alex is quite a character, a bird who shamelessly manipulates his human handlers, obstinately demands nuts before he will continue training sessions, condescendingly corrects other birds, and poses questions to make sense of the world — all this with a brain the size of a nut. Alex and other psittacines, as well as birds from the corvid family, identify objects, colors, and materials, use ordinal and cardinal numbers, and formulate . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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