• Matéria: Inglês
  • Autor: Alebesada
  • Perguntado 4 anos atrás

Início do texto
Whatever you do, don't challenge a chimpanzee named Ayumu to a number memory
game. In 2007, it became famous for its lightning speed at a game that goes like this: A
player views a computer screen where the numbers 1 through 9 appear briefly at once
and then turn to white squares. The player then taps the squares where the numbers
had been, in order from 1 to 9. People can do it. But no human competitor has ever
completed the game faster or more accurately than Ayumu, the chimp. Fast-forward
five years: it remains undefeated.
Psychologist Nicholas Humphrey of Darwin College at Cambridge University in
England now thinks he knows the secret behind the chimp's ability. Humphrey suspects
Ayumu's brain may have a condition that allows the chimp to see numbers as colors.
Parte final
This would mean that Ayumu may see a color glow after the number vanishes. Then,
Instead of remembering the numbers, it remembers a sequence of colors, each
associated with a number. "When you get extraordinary results, you need to look for
extraordinary ideas to explain them. Humphrey told Science News​

Respostas

respondido por: peehgamer22p91jxd
2

Resposta:

tá, mas o que q tem??? é pra traduzir??


matheusmatos849: sim
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