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michael crichton.congo-第8章

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 At first glance; it may seem odd that Peter Elliot should have e under attack; for this handsome; rather shy man…the son of a Manin County librarian…had avoided controversy during his years of work with Amy。 Elliot's publications were modest and temperate; his progress with Amy
 was well documented; he showed no interest in publicity; and was not among those researchers who took their apes on the Carson or the Griffin show。
 But Elliot's diffident manner concealed not only a quick intelligence; but a fierce ambition as well。 If he avoided controversy; it was only because he didn't have time for it…he had been working nights and weekends for years; and driving his staff and Amy just as hard。 He was very good at the business of science; getting grants; at all the animal behaviorist conferences; where others showed up in jeans and plaid lumberjack shirts; Elliot arrived in a three…piece suit。 Elliot intended to be the foremost ape researcher; and he intended Amy to be the foremost ape。
 Elliot's success in obtaining grants was such that in 1975; Project Amy had an annual budget of 160;000 and a staff of eight; including a child psychologist and a puter programmer。 A staff member of the Bergren Institute later said that Elliot's appeal lay in the fact that he was 〃a good investment; for example; Project Amy got fifty percent more puter time for our money because he went on line with his time…sharing terminal at night and on weekends; when the time was cheaper。 He was very cost…effective。 And dedicated; of course: Elliot obviously cared about nothing in life except his work with Amy。 That made him a boring conversationalist but a very good bet; from our standpoint。 It's hard to decide who's truly brilliant; it's easier to see who's driven; which in the long run may be more important。 We anticipated great things from Elliot。〃
 
 Peter Elliot's difficulties began on the morning of February 2; 1979。 Amy lived in a mobile home on the Berkeley campus; she spent nights there alone; and usually provided an effusive greeting the next day。 However; on that morning the Project Amy staff found her in an uncharacteristic sullen mood; she was irritable and bleary…eyed; behaving as if she had been wronged in some fashion。
 Elliot felt that something had upset her during the night。 When asked; she kept making signs for 〃sleep box;〃 a new
 word pairing he did not understand。 That in itself was not unusual; Amy made up new word pairings all the time; and they were often hard to decipher。 Just a few days before; she had bewildered them by talking about 〃crocodile milk。〃 Eventually they realized that Amy's milk had gone sour; and that since she disliked crocodiles (which she had only seen in picture books); she somehow decided that sour milk was 〃crocodile milk。〃
 Now she was talking about 〃sleep box。〃 At first they thought she might be referring to her nestlike bed。 It turned out she was using 〃box〃 in her usual sense; to refer to the television set。
 Everything in her trailer; including the television; was controlled on a twenty…four…hour cycle by the puter。 They ran a check to see if the television had been turned on during the night; disturbing her sleep。 Since Amy liked to watch television; it was conceivable that she had managed to turn it on herself。 But Amy looked scornful as they examined the actual television in the trailer。 She clearly meant something else。
 Finally they determined that by 〃sleep box〃 she meant 〃sleep pictures。〃 When asked about these sleep pictures; Amy signed that they were 〃bad pictures〃 and 〃old pictures;〃 and that they 〃make Amy cry。〃
 She was dreaming。
 The fact that Amy was the first primate to report dreams caused tremendous excitement among Elliot's staff。 But the excitement was short…lived。 Although Amy continued to dream on succeeding nights; she refused to discuss her dreams; in fact; she seemed to blame the researchers for this new and confusing intrusion into her mental life。 Worse; her waking behavior deteriorated alarmingly。
 Her word acquisition rate fell from 2。7 words a week to 0。8 words a week; her spontaneous word formation rate from 1。9 to 0。3。 Monitored attention span was halved。 Mood swings increased; erratic and unmotivated behavior became monplace; temper tantrums occurred daily。 Amy was four and a half feet tall; and weighed 130 pounds。 She was an immensely strong animal。 The staff began to wonder if they could control her。
 Her refusal to talk about her dreams frustrated them。 They tried a variety of investigative approaches; they showed her pictures from books and magazines; they ran the ceiling…mounted video monitors around the clock; in case she signed something significant while alone (like young children; Amy often 〃talked to herself〃); they even administered a battery of neurological tests; including an EEG。
 Finally they hit on finger painting。
 This was immediately successful。 Amy was enthusiastic about finger painting; and after they mixed cayenne pepper with the pigments; she stopped licking her fingers。 She drew images swiftly and repetitively; and she seemed to bee somewhat more relaxed; more her old self。
 David Bergman; the child psychologist; noted that 〃what Amy actually draws is a cluster of apparently related images:
 inverted crescent shapes; or semicircles; which are always associated with an area of vertical green streaks。 Amy says the green streaks represent 'forest;' and she calls the semi…circles 'bad houses' or 'old houses。' In addition she often draws black circles; which she calls 'holes。'
 Bergman cautioned against the obvious conclusion that she was drawing old buildings in the jungle。 〃Watching her make drawings one after another; again and again; convinces me of the obsessive and private nature of the imagery。 Amy is troubled by these pictures; and she is trying to get them out; to banish them to paper。〃
 In fact; the nature of the imagery remained mysterious to the Project Amy staff。 By late April; 1979; they had concluded that her dreams could be explained in four ways。 In order of seriousness; they were:
 1。The dreams are an attempt to rationalize events in her daily life。 This was the usual explanation of (human) dreams; but the staff doubted that it applied in Amy's case。
 2。The dreams are a transitional adolescent manifestation。
 At seven years of age; Amy was a gorilla teenager; and for nearly a year she had shown many typical teenage traits; including rages and sulks; fussiness about her appearance; a new interest in the opposite sex。
 3。The dreams are a species…specific phenomenon。 It was possible that all gorillas had disturbing dreams; and that in the wild the resultant stresses were handled in some fashion by the behavior of the group。 Although gorillas had been studied in the wild for the past twenty years; there was no evidence for this。
 4。The dreams are the first sign of incipient dementia。 This was the most feared possibility。 To train an ape effectively; one had to begin with an infant; as the years progressed; researchers waited to see if their animal would grow up to be bright or stupid; recalcitrant or pliable; healthy or sickly。 The health of apes was a constant worry; many programs collapsed after years of effort and expense when the apes died of physical or mental illness。 Timothy; an Atlanta chimp; became psychotic in 1976 and mitted suicide by coprophagia; choking to death on his own feces。 Maurice; a Chicago orang; became intensely neurotic; developing phobias that halted work in 1977。 For better or worse; the very intelligence that made apes worthwhile subjects for study also made them as unstable as human beings。
 But the Project Amy staff was unable to make further progress。 In May; 1979; they made what turned out to be a momentous decision: they decided to publish Amy's drawings; and submitted her images to the Journal of Behavioral Sciences。
 
 2。Breakthrough
 
 〃DREAM BEHAVIOR IN A MOUNTAIN GORILLA〃 WAS
 never published。 The paper was routinely forwarded to three scientists on the editorial board for review; and one copy somehow (it is still unclear just how) fell into the hands of the Primate Preservation Agency; a New York group formed in 1975 to prevent the 〃unwarranted and

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