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  2. Duck test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duck_test

    Duck test. A mallard, shown looking like a duck and swimming like a duck. The duck test is a form of abductive reasoning. This is its usual expression: If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably a duck. The test implies that a person can identify an unknown subject by observing that subject's habitual ...

  3. Elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant

    Elephants are the largest living land animals. Three living species are currently recognised: the African bush elephant ( Loxodonta africana ), the African forest elephant ( L. cyclotis ), and the Asian elephant ( Elephas maximus ). They are the only surviving members of the family Elephantidae and the order Proboscidea; extinct relatives ...

  4. Elephant test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Elephant_test&redirect=no

    Duck test#Elephant test. This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect: With possibilities: This is a redirect from a title that potentially could be expanded into a new article or other type of associated page such as a new template. The topic described by this title may be more detailed than is ...

  5. Mirror test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_test

    The mirror test —sometimes called the mark test, mirror self-recognition ( MSR) test, red spot technique, or rouge test —is a behavioral technique developed in 1970 by American psychologist Gordon Gallup Jr. as an attempt to determine whether an animal possesses the ability of visual self-recognition. [1]

  6. Elephant cognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant_cognition

    Elephant cognition is animal cognition as present in elephants. Most contemporary ethologists view the elephant as one of the world's most intelligent animals. With a mass of just over 5 kg (11 lb), an elephant's brain has more mass than that of any other land animal, and although the largest whales have body masses twenty times those of a ...

  7. Topsy (elephant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topsy_(elephant)

    Topsy ( c. 1875 – January 4, 1903) was a female Asian elephant who was electrocuted at Coney Island, New York, in January 1903. Born in Southeast Asia around 1875, Topsy was secretly brought into the United States soon thereafter and added to the herd of performing elephants at the Forepaugh Circus, who fraudulently advertised her as the ...

  8. Rorschach test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rorschach_test

    The Rorschach test is a projective psychological test in which subjects' perceptions of inkblots are recorded and then analyzed using psychological interpretation, complex algorithms, or both. Some psychologists use this test to examine a person's personality characteristics and emotional functioning.

  9. Elephantidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephantidae

    Elephasidae Lesson, 1842. Elephantidae is a family of large, herbivorous proboscidean mammals collectively called elephants and mammoths. These are large terrestrial mammals with a snout modified into a trunk and teeth modified into tusks. Most genera and species in the family are extinct.

  10. Electrocuting an Elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrocuting_an_Elephant

    Electrocuting an Elephant (also known as Electrocution of an Elephant) is a 1903 American black-and-white silent actuality short depicting the killing of the elephant Topsy by electrocution at a Coney Island amusement park.

  11. African elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_elephant

    African elephant. African elephants are members of the genus Loxodonta comprising two living elephant species, the African bush elephant ( L. africana) and the smaller African forest elephant ( L. cyclotis ). Both are social herbivores with grey skin, but differ in the size and colour of their tusks and in the shape and size of their ears and ...