A computer-controlled language training system for investigating the language skills of young apes

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Abstract

A computer-controlled language training system was designed and constructed to enhance the objectivity and efficiency of inquiry into the language-relevant behaviors of apes. The system allows the S to gain control over the events of the 24-h day in direct correspondence with its competence in using a keyboard on which each key represents a word. Various incentives can be obtained through the selection and depression of appropriate keys in accordance with rules of sentence structure monitored by a computer. The system is flexible and allows for eventual conversation between man and ape, with the computer as the intermediary. A Teletype records all that transpires. Achievements of the chimpanzee S over the course of the first 8 months of the system's operation attest to the worth of the system and training methods. © 1973 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Rumbaugh, D. M., Gill, T. V., Brown, J. V., von Glasersfeld, E. C., Pisani, P., Warner, H., & Bell, C. L. (1973). A computer-controlled language training system for investigating the language skills of young apes. Behavior Research Methods & Instrumentation, 5(5), 385–392. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03200213

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