A chimp is being trained in the lab to change circuit breakers and other tasks for a Mars mission. To prepare the chimp for extreme cases, the trainers give him 100 circuit breakers in a chamber that has 100 different bulbs. The controller is outside the chamber. All the bulbs are switched on. The chimp must place circuit breakers one by one and check inside the chamber if any bulbs
are turned off or not. If the trainers were training the chimp to be most efficient as this task, what is the minimum number of trips they would expect the chimp to make?
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Answer:
1000
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Jane Goodall: biography of a primatologist
By Cynthia Stokes Brown
In 1960 Jane Goodall pioneered the study of chimpanzees in the wild, showing the world how similar chimpanzee behavior is to that of humans, and helping to demonstrate the close evolutionary relationship of the two species.
Jane Goodall observes a chimpanzee named Frodo © Kennan Ward/CORBIS
An early interest in animal life
Jane Goodall was born in London, England, in 1934. Her parents were Mortimer Herbert Morris-Goodall, a car-racing businessman, and Margaret Myfanwe Joseph, a novelist who published under the name Vanne Morris-Goodall.
When Jane was just over a year old, her father gave her a stuffed toy, a lifelike replica of a chimpanzee, named “Jubilee” after the first chimpanzee infant ever born at the London Zoo. The toy horrified some of her mother’s friends, who thought that it would give Jane nightmares. They could not foresee the favorable influence it would have on her.
Goodall’s interest in observing animal life showed up early. When she was 4, she wanted so badly to know how an egg came out of a hen that she hid inside a small henhouse for nearly four hours waiting to see it happen. Meanwhile, the whole household had been searching for her and had even reported her missing to the police.
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