Bonobos and chimps demonstrate longest long-term memory ever found in nonhuman animals, scientists say
Whether it is a sea of faces at a school reunion or distant family at a wedding, our ability to remember people we met years ago can come in handy. Now it seems our evolutionary cousins have a similar skill.
Researchers have found bonobos and chimpanzees can recall peers they spent time with in the past, even if they have been separated for decades. What is more, this recognition appears to be influenced by whether they got on well with each other – or not.
More Stories
Revealed: Chinese researchers can access half a million UK GP records
Humanoid workers and surveillance buggies: ‘embodied AI’ is reshaping daily life in China
Massachusetts governor calls Trump’s attacks on Harvard ‘bad for science’