In recent years, a slow revolution has been unfolding among a contingent of animal-behavior researchers who argue that our impulses about other species, rooted in our own experiences of the world, are scientifically useful.
For many animals, there's even 'a good case to be made that it's the right approach to assume, until we know otherwise, that there's similarity,' Amy Parish, a primatologist at the University of Southern California, told me.
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