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Farewell, Alex

Jaymes

The cake is a lie
According to The Alex Foundation, Alex the African grey died this morning of unknown causes. :(

He was studied extensively in avian intelligence research, along with two other African greys named Griffin and Wart.

RIP buddy. :(
 

jamaesi

To Save A Lamb
Dr. Pepperberg must be just... heartbroken. Alex did so much for the study of animal intelligence. :( I hope whatever they find in the necropsy will protect Alex's [SIZE=-1]protégés[/SIZE], Wart and Griff.

Dr. Pepperberg even took her time to help me with my seniour project for my high school that I did on Avian Intelligence. I've been using some of her methods that she explained to me to teach my cockatoo Squishy.

I think one of my favourite Alex stories was when she had to take him to the vet to leave overnight for a treatment. As she was leaving Alex, thinking he was being left for punishment, cried out "come back! I love you! I'm sorry! I want to go back!"


Here's a video of Alex and Dr. Pepperberg. Scroll down a bit to the part that says "Entertaining Parrots" and click on "watch video."
 

Jaymes

The cake is a lie
Alex was really a character. This has got to be my favorite story about Alex:

"[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]There are some things that the birds do that, colloquially speaking, "just blow us away." We were training Alex to sound out phonemes, not because we want him to read as humans do, but we want to see if he understands that his labels are made up of sounds that can be combined in different ways to make up new words; that is, to demonstrate evidence for segmentation. He babbles at dusk, producing strings like "green, cheen, bean, keen", so we have some evidence for this behavior, but we need more solid data.

[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Thus we are trying to get him to sound out refrigerator letters, the same way one would train children on phonics. We were doing demos at the Media Lab for our corporate sponsors; we had a very small amount of time scheduled and the visitors wanted to see Alex work. So we put a number of differently colored letters on the tray that we use, put the tray in front of Alex, and asked, "Alex, what sound is blue?" He answers, "Ssss." It was an "s", so we say "Good birdie" and he replies, "Want a nut."

[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Well, I don't want him sitting there using our limited amount of time to eat a nut, so I tell him to wait, and I ask, "What sound is green?" Alex answers, "Ssshh." He's right, it's "sh," and we go through the routine again: "Good parrot." "Want a nut." "Alex, wait. What sound is orange?" "ch." "Good bird!" "Want a nut." We're going on and on and Alex is clearly getting more and more frustrated. He finally gets very slitty-eyed and he looks at me and states, "Want a nut. Nnn, uh, tuh." [/FONT]

[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Not only could you imagine him thinking, "Hey, stupid, do I have to spell it for you?" but the point was that he had leaped over where we were and had begun sounding out the letters of the words for us. This was in a sense his way of saying to us, "I know where you're headed! Let's get on with it," which gave us the feeling that we were on the right track with what we were doing. These kinds of things don't happen in the lab on a daily basis, but when they do, they make you realize there's a lot more going on inside these little walnut-sized brains than you might at first imagine.[/FONT]"
 

Jaymes

The cake is a lie
The Alex Foundation's website was updated today with more information about Alex, and it included this:
Alex was found to be in good health at his most recent annual physical about two weeks ago. According to the vet who conducted the necropsy, there was no obvious cause of death. Dr. Pepperberg will continue her innovative research program at Harvard and Brandeis University with Griffin and Arthur, two other young African Grey parrots who have been a part of the ongoing research program.
Well, at least if there's no obvious cause of death it shouldn't be able to spread to the other two... Poor Alex, though. :( 31 is so young for an African grey.
 

Buttercup

Veteran Member
I was so shocked to hear about Alex and especially the fact that he was so young. It's even more troubling to me that no cause of death was found. I have a year old AG and they are awesome birds.
 
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