Kaitlyn R. Willgohs’s research while affiliated with The Graduate Center, CUNY and other places

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Publications (1)


Do elephants really never forget? What we know about elephant memory and a call for further investigation
  • Article

October 2024

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113 Reads

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3 Citations

Learning & Behavior

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Kaitlyn R. Willgohs

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Sangpa Dittakul

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Joshua M. Plotnik

Despite popular culture’s promotion of the elephant’s ability to “never forget,” there is remarkably limited empirical research on the memory capacities of any living elephant species (Asian, Elephas maximus; African savanna, Loxodonta africana; African forest, Loxodonta cyclotis). A growing body of literature on elephant cognition and behavioral ecology has provided insight into the elephant’s ability to behave flexibly in changing physical and social environments, but little direct evidence of how memory might relate to this flexibility exists. In this paper, we review and discuss the potential relationships between what we know about elephant cognition and behavior and the elephants’ memory for the world around them as they navigate their physical, social, and spatial environments. We also discuss future directions for investigating elephant memory and implications for such research on elephant conservation and human–elephant conflict mitigation.

Citations (1)


... Moreover, the maxim that elephant elders 'are repositories of knowledge' [135] holds up: this conclusion, previously drawn from a few seminal studies (e.g. [96,135,136]), is widely apparent across the papers reviewed here (and see [159]). We cannot yet conclude how elders acquire their knowledge, nor whether naive individuals learn by observing them, but it is clear that elephants benefit from having elders present in their society. ...

Reference:

Knowledge transmission, culture and the consequences of social disruption in wild elephants
Do elephants really never forget? What we know about elephant memory and a call for further investigation
  • Citing Article
  • October 2024

Learning & Behavior