Investigating Empathy in Southeast Alaskan Humpback Whales
TWCF Number:
0440
Project Duration:
June 1, 2020 - August 31, 2022
Core Funding Area:
Big Questions
Priority:
Region:
North America
Amount Awarded:
$234,811
Grant DOI*:
https://doi.org/10.54224/20440
*A Grant DOI (digital object identifier) is a unique, open, global, persistent and machine-actionable identifier for a grant.
Director: Laurance Doyle
Institution: SETI InstituteIn an apparent display of altruism, humpback whales have been documented putting their own well-being at risk to come to the aid of smaller species in mortal distress. This exhibition of altruistic behavior may be indicative of empathy. Directed by Laurance Doyle, this Diverse Intelligences project will employ acoustic playbacks of predatory species (killer whales), coupled with the distress sounds of imperiled sea lions, in an effort to use empirical science to test for evidence of empathy in a non-human species that is evolutionarily separated from humans by 65 million years. In doing so, Dr. Doyle’s team will expand the lens of knowledge pertaining to compassionate action (that in many traditions forms the ethical foundation for human societies), and extend this theoretical foundation to include non-human species in the context of their own natural systems.
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