Science Friday - The Legacy Of Primatologist Frans de Waal
Episode Date: March 28, 2024It wasn’t that long ago that scientists didn’t think animals could rival humans in terms of intelligence, emotions, or empathy. But the groundbreaking work of Dr. Frans de Waal helped change all o...f that. De Waal spent his life studying the lives of animals — especially our closest cousins, chimpanzees and bonobos.The primatologist died last week at the age of 75, and we wanted to remember him by sharing one of our favorite conversations with him on the show. It’s from 2019, when he published his book Mama’s Last Hug: Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves.In it, he tells the story of a female chimp who didn’t produce enough milk to feed her young. When de Waal taught her to feed her baby with a bottle instead, she repaid him with what most of us would recognize as gratitude: holding both of his hands, and whimpering sadly if he tried to leave.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What does it mean to be intelligent or to have emotions?
I think some animals are maybe not the most intelligent animals, but they are very emotional.
But I think all animals, all the mammals for sure, and also all the birds, they have quite an emotionality.
It's Thursday, March 28th, and this is Science Friday.
I'm SciFri producer Charles Bergquist.
Primatologist Franz DeVal was a frequent guest on Science Friday over the years,
talking about the behavior and inner life of animals, particularly.
early chimpanzees. Dr. Devald
died recently at the age of 75.
Here's Ira Flato to remember him.
It wasn't that long ago that scientists didn't think animals could rival humans in terms
of intelligence, emotions, or empathy.
But the groundbreaking work of Franz Duval helped to change all of that.
Deval spent his lifetime studying the lives of animals, especially our closest cousins,
the chimpanzees.
The primatologist died last week at the age of 75.
and we wanted to remember him by sharing one of our favorite conversations with him on the show.
It's from 2019 when he published his book Mama's Last Hug, Animal Emotions, and What They Tell Us About Ourselves.
In it, he tells the story of a female chimp who didn't produce enough milk to feed her young.
When Deval taught her to feed her baby with a bottle instead, she repaid him with what most of us would recognize as gratitude, holding both of his hands.
hands and whimpering sadly if he tried to leave. It's just one of the many fascinating stories
of animal emotions he shared with me from Mama's Last Hug. Let's listen. Who was Mama?
Mama was the alpha female of a very large chimpanzee colony at the Arnhem Zoo in the Netherlands,
who I had known for 40 years. A very central figure. She was not physically dominant over the
males, but she was certainly more powerful than most males in terms of
of her political connections and her skills of bringing parties together and so on.
And Mama's last hug refers to her encounter with my professor, Jan van Hov, who's 80 now,
who went into her night cage to say goodbye when she was dying.
And so she embraced him.
She actually calmed him down because I think he was a bit nervous going in there.
We never normally would go in with an adult chimpanzee.
So he was a bit nervous and I think she calmed him down.
which was typical of her kind of behavior.
So what was that last hug line?
You described it in the book?
Well, she embraced him and then tapped him on the back of his neck and his shoulders,
and she had a big smile on her face, and she made some sounds.
And actually, people were, first of all, very moved by that encounter,
because it has been seen by, I think, 200 million people on the Internet.
So they were very moved, and I can understand that.
But people were also very surprised, and that surprised me.
Why are people so surprised that a chimpanzee may express emotions in a very similar way,
similar gestures, similar face as we do?
Because chimpanzees are our closest relative,
so of course everything they do is extremely similar to what we do.
And so I felt I needed to explain about facial expressions and about sounds that chimpanzees make.
And so I took that as the starting point.
Yeah, and you verified for everybody who has a pet that animals really do have emotions.
Well, that's interesting, is that you say that because the pet owners usually, as soon as you say, do animals have emotions, you say, my dog, and they go on and on.
But in science, we have been extremely reluctant, unfortunately.
I think we went through a very dark period in the previous century where a group of scientists, the behaviorists, we call them, had decided that the inner lives of animals, but also actually humans, the inner lives were irrelevant.
So for humans, for example, it's only in the 1960s that we started to talk about.
the intelligence and emotional states and so on.
And in animals, for sure, there was an enormous taboo that we lived under.
And so I learned as a student that you shouldn't be talking about emotions.
It's a word that you should not even mention.
Yeah, in other words, if you saw a facial gesture, it was not an animal smiling.
You would just describe it as how the muscles move, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So if you tick a, let's say, a chimpanzee and the chimpanzee laughs, which they do,
they have laughing sounds like, uh-uh, type sounds.
They would say, why don't you call it vocalized panting?
So they would look for words that make the connection with humans obscure.
You write in the book that some psychologists have argued that the emotions we feel must be more nuanced than those of the animals
because we have language to describe what, 12 different shades of anger, for example.
Pleasure, fury, resentment, just to name a few.
What's wrong with that?
That's based on the idea that language is at the root of it.
things and I don't think I think language is a very late appearing phenomenon in our species
and and also in the development you wouldn't say that a child who cannot speak has no emotions
so so language is sort of irrelevant language is something we use to describe our feelings
and to talk about them and I can explain to you why I took a certain decision and how my emotions
figured into that so language is very good to talk about emotions but are not at the root of the
emotions. But it's been the reaction to
you talking. I mean, this is one of your
main themes, and it's been for a while that
the animals have emotions, and you talk about it in the
book, about tickling a rat on its
tummy, and it's really laughing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And all these different animals,
and horses and things like that.
Well, the reaction is, of course, of the general public
is obviously, they
assume emotions
in animals, even though the animals that
we eat, they often don't talk about, but
anyway, the animals that we keep,
they would say. But in science
of course, there has been an extreme reluctance.
And even though I have always worked on, let's say, conflict resolution and reconciliation
and that kind of things, or empathy where emotions clearly play a role, even there,
the word emotion is often not used for animals because I think we confuse emotions with feelings
and people wanted to stay away from that.
You write in the book that you've always been fascinating with observing others, even from an early
age.
So what led you toward primatology particularly?
That's almost like an accident.
As a child, I collected all sorts of water animals because Holland is full of water,
and so salamanders fish.
I also collected birds and mice and frogs and all that kind of things.
And then when I went to the university, I wanted to study animals, and I became a biologist.
But in my first university that I went to, they only worked with dead animals that you cut open.
I found it extremely boring.
So I went to another university where they did animal studies.
etology. And that's how I rolled into animal behavior. And the primate work is almost like an
accident that could have ended up with fish or with birds or whatever. I love animals. And so
for me it doesn't make so much of a difference. But if you want to make comparisons with humans,
of course, then the primates are ideal. You go through so many different emotions. I mean,
you talk about bereavement, you talk about funerals that the chimps have for each other.
Tell us about some of the more interesting ones that you've discovered.
Yeah, so one of the emotions I went through is disgust because psychologists have recently declared disgust a uniquely human emotion, maybe based on moral disgust when we are disgusted by the behavior, let's say by people who get their kids into schools by illegal means, for example.
So we discussed about the kind of things.
And so they have declared disgust uniquely human, but disgust is a very old emotion that serves to keep contaminants and parasites.
out of your body, and we see it in many species.
How does it manifest?
So, for example, dogs are often said to be lacking in disgust
because they lick their testicles and they eat feces and stuff like that,
and people use them as an example.
But dogs are very disgusted by citrus, for example.
If you cut open a lemon and you shouldn't feed it to your dog,
it's exactly poisonous to them.
But you hold it in front of them,
they will show a full-blown disgust response.
Chimpanzees in disgust displays,
they have a face very similar to the human disgust face
where we curl up the lip and bring the lip close,
the upper lip close to the nose.
And you also talk about chimps caring for each other
when they're ill, and they bring blankets for the dead.
And who would have thought that?
You would have.
Yeah, yeah.
So we had a male at Jerkish who was dying,
and we kept him apart,
and we kept the door a little bit open
so that the others could access him,
and he was in a very bad shape.
And the females would actually bring strong,
to him and shoved behind his back, he was leaning against the wall.
The way we do when we go to a hospital and put pillows behind people.
Because you study chimps and you find these emotions and behaviors that other people
would not have found, do you think that we are misinterpreting the intelligence and
possibly the emotions of Neanderthals?
Oh, I'm sure the Neanderthals have been downplayed by our species for ages.
the Neanderthals must be stupid and backward and so on.
I think all the evidence that we see is that that's not the case.
The Neanderthals actually had brains slightly larger than our brain,
and so I think we have totally underestimated the Neanderthals.
You mentioned in your book how many so-called animalistic things humans do without realizing that we do it.
I'll give you an example, sniffing our hand after we shake hands with somebody.
Yeah, they found that on hidden cameras.
they had filmed a lot of people greeting each other, and they found that when people greet someone
by shaking hands of the same gender, they tend to bring their hand to their nose, and they're
probably not even aware that they're sniffing the other one, but they're doing that.
A tweet coming in, what research is they're regarding the response to music in animals?
What if any music appears to generate or reflect mood?
Well, there is research now on that.
increasingly, for example, whether animals can follow the rhythm of music or follow the rhythm
that you as a human present them with. And some animals are actually quite good at that.
It's like parrots are good at it and pinny pets like the sea lions are good at it.
We also did experiments where we present music to apes and see what they like and what they don't
like. We found, I believe, that Indian music was really liked by chimpanzees.
So people do experiments on this. Whether they experience emotional.
similar to the ones that we experience with music is hard to tell.
All we can measure is do they want to listen to it or not want to listen to it.
One of the funniest ones was a very old experiment on starlings in a cage
which could hop from one perch to another one.
And one perch produced Mozart and the other one produced Schoenberg.
And the Starlings clearly preferred Mozart.
As you might expect.
So you can't tell if certain music is soothing.
or if certain music is excited toward it.
Yeah, maybe there are ways of telling that apart,
but for the moment we just look at preferences.
All right, let's go to the phone.
To Matthew in Denver.
Hi, Matthew.
Hi.
I was wondering, Franz,
how you've seen the veterinary world change
with regards to animal emotions being more accepted
than maybe primates used in research.
Well, I think the veterinary schools,
they need to do more on behavior.
They very often ignore behavior.
some, I know some that have behavior classes for the students, but they very often ignore the
behavior of animals, and that includes also the emotions and the expression of emotions.
As far as primates in research, you know probably that in chimpanzees, that is sort of ended.
Chimpanzees are not really used for biomedical studies anymore.
And the other primates that are being kept, like macaques are still kept in many facilities,
I think should all be housed socially.
My view has always been that you cannot keep these monkeys in single cages, as
they often still do.
And I don't know why they still do that because it's really not necessary.
And they can keep them in social groups and that would be so far better than what they do at the moment.
This is Science Friday from WNYC Studios.
Talking with Franz de Wall, author of Mama's Last Hug, Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves,
to tweet in from Susan, who says cats have been recognized often as aloof and uninterested in humans.
Owners may disagree.
discuss I happen to be an owner I've had cats all my life and I think cats are just very
variable there are cats who are loners yes they exist but there's also many cats who are very
social if if you have like I always used to have four cats if you move from one room in the
house to the other room in the house all the cats would move to the other to the room where you
are because they I think there's a they like variation and they like your presence and they
Actually, cats are much more sociable than people often assume.
You write that the emotional lives of birds are on par with mammals.
Tell us about that.
Yeah, birds have these very strong attachments.
So, for example, if you talk about grieving and being affected by the death of a partner,
then birds are a prime example because many birds have lifelong bonds between male and female.
And so if one of them dies, I used to have jackdaws, which is a sort of corvite,
sort of little crow actually.
And I had two that were very bonded to each other.
And when the female disappeared, he escaped from the voliere.
The male kept calling and calling and calling until he died, basically.
He didn't eat and he died.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you also talk about rodent faces were long thought to be unaffected by emotions,
but detailed studies show other rodents have no problem.
Recognizing.
No, the rodent literature was always.
emphasized that they have no facial expressions.
And now recently there was a study, for example, in Switzerland that was done,
where there was a funny study.
They had two classes of rats, one that they tickled and treated very well,
and they sort of made them very happy,
and another group that they didn't do much with.
And then they asked that an independent judge to judge from the face and the color of the ears
what they saw had happened, and they could tell the happy rodents apart from the unhappy ones.
In the last few minutes, tell us what the emotions tell us about ourselves.
How would you summarize that?
I think we are much more emotional beings than we often say we are.
We think we are rational beings and we take all these rational decisions.
But I think emotions figure into everything we do.
And we also underestimate the animality of our emotions because I don't think we have emotions
that animals don't have.
So basically, I look at our emotions like organs.
I don't have any organ in my body that a frog doesn't have or a rat doesn't have.
I have a liver and a kidney and a heart and brain and so on.
And I think the same is true for our emotions.
There are no human emotions in my mind that cannot be traced back to equivalent animal emotions.
In fact, you talk about in your book that pigs can have an optimistic or a pessimistic look,
depending on how they're raised.
Yeah, yeah, they have done experiments on pigs because they do these experiments where they have to react to
an ambivalent stimulus and see
if they're hoping for food or not
hoping for food. And so you can
test the optimism of the pig.
And the optimism of the pig depends
on how the pig is kept.
If the pig is kept in a nice
space with a lot of straw
and enrichment,
the pig is more optimistic than
the ones who are kept in a barren place.
So let's not confuse when we talk
about animals. What we think animal
intelligence is and emotion
is, right?
Yeah, I think some animals are maybe not the most intelligent animals, but they are very emotional.
But I think all animals, all the mammals for sure, and also all the birds, they have quite an emotionality.
Indeed. Do animals have comedy? Laughter?
Yeah, I describe some examples of the sense of humor of the great apes.
So, for example, one example is this was a fellow researcher of mine who put on a panther mask and hidden the bushes away from the chimpanzees.
and then all of a sudden he showed himself.
And all the chimps, 25 chimps, they got very angry at him
and started throwing stuff at him.
And he did that multiple times.
And then at some point he took the mask off,
showing his own human face.
And there were many chimps who had this laugh expression
that chimpanzees have as if they thought this was sort of amusing
that he had been tricking them, you know.
What don't you know yet that you want to know?
Oh, I want to know more about the feeling side of the emotions,
about how they experience them.
So we don't know that really.
And for the moment, that's why in my book I'm very shy about the feeling part of the emotions.
But I think with neuroscience we may get there and we can maybe see if the feelings associated with them are similar to ours.
That's primatologist Franz de Vall talking to me in 2019.
We were discussing his book, Mama's Last Hug, Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves.
You can read an excerpt at Science Friday.com slash last hug.
Franz Deval passed away.
last week at the age of 75.
That's it for today.
Tomorrow, guest host Ariel Dumras
joins us to help wrap up the week's news and science.
And we'll hear about the spread of plants around the world
and how some of them came to be branded invasive.
I'm SciFri producer Charles Bergquist.
Thanks for listening.
We'll see you soon.
