Thinking Like a Chimpanzee
Tetsuro Matsuzawa has spent 30 years studying our closest primate relative to better understand the human mind
- By Jon Cohen
- Photographs by Jensen Walker
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
The Primate Research Institute sits on a hill in Inuyama, Japan, a quiet city that rambles along the Kiso River and is renowned for a 16th-century castle. Handsome homes with traditional curved roofs line Inuyama’s winding streets. The primate facility consists mostly of drab, institutional boxes from the 1960s, but it has one stunning architectural feature: an outdoor facility that includes a five-story-high climbing tower for the 14 chimpanzees currently in residence. Chimps frequently scamper to the top of the tower and take in the view; they tightrope across wires connecting different parts of the tower and chase each other in battle and play.
When I walked out onto a balcony overlooking the tower with Tetsuro Matsuzawa, the head of the institute, the chimpanzees spotted us immediately and began to chatter.
“Woo-ooo-woo-ooo-WOO-ooo-WOOOOOOO!” Matsuzawa sang out, voicing a chimp call known as a pant-hoot.
A half-dozen chimps yelled back.
“I am sort of a member of the community,” he told me. “When I pant-hoot, they have to reply because Matsuzawa is coming.”
Matsuzawa and the dozen scientists and graduate students who work with him are peering into the minds of our closest relatives, whose common ancestor with humans lived some six million years ago, to understand what separates them from us. He and his co-workers probe how chimpanzees remember, learn numbers, perceive and categorize objects and match voices with faces. It’s a tricky business that requires intimate relationships with the animals as well as cleverly designed studies to test the range and limitations of the chimpanzees’ cognition.
To move them from the outdoor structure to the laboratories inside, researchers lead the animals along a network of catwalks. As I ambled under the catwalks, the chimps going into various laboratories for the morning’s experiments spit on me repeatedly—the standard greeting offered to unfamiliar humans.
The lab rooms are about the size of a studio apartment, with humans separated from chimpanzees by Plexiglas walls. Following Japanese tradition, I removed my shoes, put on slippers, and took a seat with Matsuzawa and his team of researchers. The human side of the room was crowded with computer monitors, TVs, video cameras, food dishes and machines that dispense treats to the chimps. The chimp enclosures, which look like oversize soundproof booths from an old TV game show, were empty, but slots cut into the Plexiglas allowed the chimps to access touch-screen computers.
Matsuzawa’s star research subject is a chimp named Ai, which means “love” in Japanese. Ai arrived at the institute, part of Kyoto University, in 1977, when she was 1 year old and Matsuzawa was 27. Matsuzawa had done some basic studies with rats and monkeys, but he knew little about chimpanzees. He was given the job of training her. Years later, he wrote an account of their first meeting: “When I looked into this chimpanzee’s eyes, she looked back into mine. This amazed me—the monkeys I had known and worked with never looked into my eyes.” Monkeys, separated from humans by more than 20 million years, differ from chimpanzees and other apes in many ways, including having tails and relatively limited mental capacities. “I had simply thought that chimpanzees would be big black monkeys,” Matsuzawa wrote. “This, however, was no monkey. It was something mysterious.”
Now, one of the researchers pushed a button, gates clanged and Ai entered the enclosure. Her son Ayumu (which means “walk”) went into an enclosure next-door, which was connected to his mother’s room by a partition that could be opened and closed. The institute makes a point of studying mothers and their children together, following the procedures under which researchers conduct developmental experiments with human children. Ai sauntered over to a computer screen.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (9)
But you are stealing my last comments that they would collect to do one thing thoughtfull. Valor Alexander
Posted by Valor Alexander (Değer İskender) on November 9,2010 | 12:31 PM
this article should have serious value to anyone in any discipline, from statecraft to children's education.
there is a self-referential hubris in those who criticize this research: "other researchers" were able to attain performances levels of chimpanzees with "less practice." what Darwinian pressure prompted them to expend the energy?--the same as the chimps: tangible rewards from representing a point of view in the community.
"language- like" presupposes that language is human, rather than "human language" is human. research in birds has suggested that "grammar" may be a function of the foxp2 gene's interactions at certain brain locations, not of some ontological reality or Platonic Form styled "language."
finally, thanks to Smithsonian for this execution of its purpose--not collecting artifacts, but looking for meaning.
Posted by gabriel bear on September 18,2010 | 03:40 PM
The chimp project at Western Washington University studies the chimps in a more narrow scope, relating to language almost exclusively. They do not "replenish" the population with new chimps or births and plan to let the seven they have spend their lives at the complex and then the study will expire. It is based on what they say is compassion for the captives and the life they are forced to live. It seems the towers at Dr. Matsuzawa's would be an improvement for WWU's chimps, although they are older, in their 40's. Does Dr. Matsuzawa have similar concerns about the lives of his chimps as to being captives rather than free?
Posted by Barbara Millsap on September 12,2010 | 12:52 PM
The study I'm referring to is:
Anim Cogn. 2009 Mar;12(2):405-7. Epub 2008 Dec 30. Memory for the order of briefly presented numerals in humans as a function of practice.
Silberberg A, Kearns D.
The researchers tested themselves at the numerical memory task after practicing it and found that they performed as well as Ayumu. They argue that Matsuzawa's original comparisons to humans has "an important methodological difference" as only the chimpanzees practiced the task repeatedly.
Posted by Jon Cohen on August 30,2010 | 11:45 AM
Despite Matsuzawa’s precision, some people in the field caution that his experiments can fool us into granting chimpanzees mental faculties they do not possess. Other researchers found that they could perform as well as Ayumu on the numbers test if they practiced enough.
Jon: Could you explain the second sentence, with detail from the other researchers? Thanks.
Posted by Clayton Burns on August 28,2010 | 04:29 PM
Marilyn: Your question intrigued me, so I typed the two words chimpanzee and music into my favorite search engine. It delivered >500,000 hits.
The answer to your first question is yes. Chimps do respond to music. The answer to your second question is no. That is not the difference that makes us human.
At the most basic genetic level the basic difference between humans and all the great apes is that while normal apes have 48 chromosomes, normal humans have 46. Ape chromosomes 7 and 13 combined to make human chromosome 2. The residual telomer in the middle confirms the karyotype pattern.
It is not obvious to me how this change produced the enormous survival advantage our species enjoys.
Posted by Frank Weigert on August 25,2010 | 07:15 AM
Fascinating as always,
Professor Matsuzawa is one of the most down to Earth, extremely modest, and one of the most respected Chimpanzee researchers, not only by "his" Chimpanzees but by many scientist and students worldwide, including me, a student of Chimpanzees for life. I had a real privilege to induce a play session with Lady Ai, join Professor Matsuzawa on his office-balcony for a pant-hoot concert with the rest of the Chimpanzees! I fully enjoyed my visit to PRI, invited by Prof. Dr. Matsuzawa. Long live and teach all of us Alpha Male: Professor Matsuzawa! Thank you for all your support and friendship, respectfully yours, - Michael(ChimpyMike)
Posted by Michael Seres, S.o.Ch. on August 24,2010 | 05:42 PM
Dr. Matsuzawa: Do chimpanzees respond to music? Is music one of the basic differences that make us human?
Posted by Marilyn Ippolito on August 19,2010 | 02:09 PM
Fascinating article! So well written, I felt like I was THERE! I will look forward to reading more about this important research and researcher, and look for the book at the library. Thank you so much!
Posted by Karen Simons on August 18,2010 | 01:29 AM