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Tetsuro Matsuzawa

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Nationality
  
Japan

Education
  
Kyoto University

Name
  
Tetsuro Matsuzawa

Known for
  
primatology,

Alma mater
  
Kyoto University


Tetsuro Matsuzawa wwwkyotouacjpenresearchforefrontsarchives

Born
  
October 15, 1950 (age 73) Ehime, Japan (
1950-10-15
)

Thesis
  
Hierarchy of visual perception in a chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) (1989)

Notable awards
  
Jane Goodall Award in 2001

Imagination human mind viewed from chimpanzee mind tetsuro matsuzawa at tedxyouth kyoto 2013


Tetsuro Matsuzawa (松沢 哲郎, Matsuzawa Tetsurō, born October 15, 1950) is a primatologist who was a past director of the Primate Research Institute of Kyoto University.

Contents

Tetsuro Matsuzawa Dr Tetsuro Matsuzawa

Matsuzawa is known for his research on chimpanzee intelligence both in the laboratory and in the wild. His laboratory work consists of the Ai-project, which focuses on the language-like skills, number-concepts, and memory ability of a female chimpanzee named Ai. Started in 1978, it is one of the longest running laboratory research projects on chimpanzee intelligence. Matsuzawa has been a part of the project since the beginning. Matsuzawa has also studied tool use in the wild chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea, West Africa since 1986. The bossou chimpanzee community consists of about 12 individuals and has been studied by Japanese researchers for three decades. Bossou chimps are well known to use a pair of stones as hammer and anvil to crack open oil-palm nuts. Long-term research on wild chimpanzee tool use revealed interesting topics like handedness of use of a hammer, critical period of learning nut-cracking at around 3 to 5 year old, "education by master-apprenticeship " and observational learning, possession of stones, deception, new tool use like algae-scooping, use of leaves for cushions, cultural variation in adjacent communities, etc. Matsuzawa's approach to research is to synthesize the field work and the laboratory work in order to understand the nature of chimpanzees, our evolutionary neighbors.

Tetsuro Matsuzawa Keynote Tetsuro Matsuzawa The Third International Conference on

Matsuzawa is well known for his research on chimpanzee memory, which suggests that chimpanzees outperform humans on some simple memory tasks. He has argued that this is evidence of a memorial capacity in young chimpanzees that is superior to that seen in adult humans. However, the accuracy of these findings has been disputed. Silberberg & Kearns (2008) have argued that the performance difference between human and chimpanzee trials can be explained by training effects on the tested chimpanzees. This finding has been replicated on a popular German science television show.

Tetsuro Matsuzawa About Tetsuro Matsuzawa Workshop on Behavior Cognition and

The Evolutionary Origins of Human Cognitive Development, Tetsuro Matsuzawa


Awards

Tetsuro Matsuzawa Imagination Human mind viewed from chimpanzee mind Tetsuro

  • Prince Chichibu Memorial Science Award in 1991
  • Jane Goodall Award in 2001
  • The Medal with Purple Ribbon in 2004
  • Person of Cultural Merit of 2013, by the government of Japan.
  • References

    Tetsuro Matsuzawa Wikipedia