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    Animals can fail the MSR test for reasons unrelated to la... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The mirror self-recognition (MSR) test is a value-laden study design that may not fairly assess self-awareness across species

    Animals can fail the MSR test for reasons unrelated to lacking self-awareness

    Consciousness & MindPerception
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    PerceptionConsciousness & Mind

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    Dogs fail the MSR test but pass an analogous olfactory self-recognition test, de...Gorillas avoid eye contact with conspecifics because it signals threat, which ca...Some species rely on non-visual primary sensory modalities, meaning vision-based...

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    The mirror self-recognition (MSR) test is a value-laden study design that may no...

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    Dogs fail the MSR test but pass an analogous olfactory self-recognitio...83%If a genuine thinking entity can fail the Turing test, then the Turing...81%An entity that can think may fail the Turing test.79%The mirror self-recognition (MSR) test is a value-laden study design t...77%

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    Another good example of how the design of studies in comparative cognition is value-laden is the mirror self-recognition (MSR) test, which was originally envisioned by Gordon Gallup (1970) to probe animals’ self-awareness. In this test, an animal is first allowed to become familiarized with a mirror. In a second step, the animal is anesthetized and an odorless mark is painted on their forehead. The behavior of the animal in front of the mirror is then observed, to see whether they interact with

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