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Project Nim is a 2011 documentary film directed by James Marsh. [3] It tells the life story of a chimpanzee named Nim Chimpsky, who was the center of a 1970s research project to determine whether a primate could learn to speak using American Sign Language. [4] Project Nim draws from Elizabeth Hess' book Nim Chimpsky: The Chimp Who Would be ...
Neam "Nim" Chimpsky [1] (November 19, 1973 – March 10, 2000) was a chimpanzee used in a study to determine whether chimps could learn a human language, American Sign Language (ASL). The project was led by Herbert S. Terrace of Columbia University with linguistic analysis by psycholinguist Thomas Bever .
In 1979, after Herbert Terrace and Thomas Bever's Nim Chimpsky project failed to demonstrate a chimps' ability to use sentences, Terrace criticized Project Washoe as well. Drawing on public film clips of Washoe, Terrace questioned Washoe's proported ability to create novel expressions and statements.
Petitto first met the renowned Linguist when working with Nim Chimpsky on Project Nim in the mid 1970s and this intellectual mentorship endured throughout her Harvard graduate studies and for decades to follow. [6] Petitto was graduated from Harvard with a master's degree in 1981, and a Doctorate/Ed.D. in March, 1984.
Project Nim — the story of Nim Chimpsky, a chimpanzee who was the focus of a controversial experiment that aimed to show what would happen if baby chimps were taken from their mothers at birth and raised like humans.
Terrace's research in Project Nim has been criticized for its research methodology and various ethical concerns, most notably, in Elizabeth Hess's Nim Chimpsky: The Chimp Who Would be Human (2008) [20] and a documentary film based on the book, Project Nim (2011). Following the project's conclusion, Nim was effectively abandoned by Terrace, who ...
Herbert Terrace, a cognitive scientist at Columbia University, attempted to replicate the success of Washoe's training with another chimpanzee named Nim Chimpsky. Nim was able to learn ASL, but was raised in a true "laboratory" environment. This meant that instead of being raised in a nurturing and affectionate environment that many would argue ...
Nim Chimpsky (1973–2000)—chimpanzee, named after linguist Noam Chomsky; Nyota (born 1998)—bonobo, Panbanisha's son; Oliver (1957–2012)—chimpanzee, the so-called "Missing Link", apparent "humanzee" Panbanisha—bonobo at the same research center as Kanzi; Panpanzee (1985–2014)—chimpanzee at the same research center as Kanzi