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Author Byrne, R.W.
Title Imitation without intentionality. Using string parsing to copy the organization of behaviour Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 2 Pages 63-72
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Abstract A theory of imitation is proposed, string parsing, which separates the copying of behavioural organization by observation from an understanding of the cause of its effectiveness. In string parsing, recurring patterns in the visible stream of behaviour are detected and used to build a statistical sketch of the underlying hierarchical structure. This statistical sketch may in turn aid the subsequent comprehension of cause and effect. Three cases of social learning of relatively complex skills are examined, as potential cases of imitation by string parsing. Understanding the basic requirements for successful string parsing helps to resolve the conflict between mainly negative reports of imitation in experiments and more positive evidence from natural conditions. Since string parsing does not depend on comprehension of the intentions of other agents or the everyday physics of objects, separate tests of these abilities are needed even in animals shown to learn by imitation.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3162
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Author Mercado, E. III; Uyeyama, R. U.; Pack, A.A.; Herman, L.M.
Title Memory for action events in the bottlenosed dolphin Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 1 Pages 17-25
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Abstract We investigated whether a bottlenosed dolphin’s ability to recall and repeat actions on command would immediately generalize to actions performed with specified objects. The dolphin was tested on her ability to repeat 18 novel behaviors performed with potentially interchangeable objects specified using an artificial gestural language. Such “action events” were correctly repeated at above chance levels, indicating that the dolphin had access to memories of those events. Performance levels were, however, lower than in previous tests. The dolphin appeared to have difficulty recalling which object an action was performed with. Previous research has demonstrated that animals can recall features of their environment and features of their actions independently of one another. The results of this study demonstrate (1) that the dolphin’s concept of repeating extends beyond simply accessing memories of movement patterns, and (2) that dolphins’ memories of past events incorporate representations of both self-performed acts and objects, locations, or gestural instructions.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3189
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Author Treichler, F.R.; Van Tilburg, D.
Title Training requirements and retention characteristics of serial list organization by macaque monkeys Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 4 Pages 235-244
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Abstract This work evaluated the prospect that organizational accounts of the retention of list information by monkeys might be an artifact of familiarity with conditional relationships. Seven sophisticated macaques were trained on four five-item lists. Each acquisition selectively excluded one of the internal conditional pairs of the typical four-problem sequence (AB,BC,CD,DE) that defines a five-item serially ordered list. Then, all possible novel pairings and the trained pairs appeared together in a test. After this, the previously omitted pair was trained and animals were retested. On all tasks, initial tests revealed little organization and much intersubject variability of characteristic choice strategies, but subsequent inclusion of all four conditional pairs always yielded organized serial choice. On both the four-problem tests and in a later retention, errors were directly related to interitem distance between the objects paired on test trials. These results helped to specify the conditions required for demonstration of non-human primate analogs of transitivity, and showed that even sophisticated monkeys organize information in retention only if they know all interitem relationships.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3211
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Author Galef Jr., B.G.; Whiskin, E.E.
Title Use of public information when foraging: effects of time available to sample foods Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 2 Pages 103-107
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Abstract It has been proposed that use of socially acquired information by animals should increase as the time available for individual resource sampling decreases. We gave Norway rat “observers” either 2 or 5 h day-1 to sample four foods. Three of these foods were relatively palatable, but protein-poor; the fourth was relatively unpalatable, but protein-rich. We found that observer rats that for 2 h day-1 both sampled foods and interacted with demonstrators eating only the protein-rich food ate more of the protein-rich food than did observers that sampled for 2 h day-1 but had no opportunity to interact with demonstrators. On the other hand, observer rats that could sample foods for 5 h day-1 ate equal amounts of protein-rich food whether they interacted with a demonstrator fed protein-rich food or not. Subsequent analyses showed that the time available to observers to sample foods, rather than the opportunity to interact with demonstrators determined whether such interaction influenced observers' food choices. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that animals increase their use of public information in response to temporal constraints on opportunities for resource sampling.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3215
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Author Santos, L.R.; Hauser, M.D.
Title How monkeys see the eyes: cotton-top tamarins' reaction to changes in visual attention and action Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 3 Pages 131-139
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Abstract Among social species, the capacity to detect where another individual is looking is adaptive because gaze direction often predicts what an individual is attending to, and thus what its future actions are likely to be. We used an expectancy violation procedure to determine whether cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus oedipus) use the direction of another individual's gaze to predict future actions. Subjects were familiarized with a sequence in which a human actor turned her attention toward one of two objects sitting on a table and then reached for that object. Following familiarization, subjects saw two test events. In one test event, the actor gazed at the new object and then reached for that object. From a human perspective, this event is considered consistent with the causal relationship between visual attention and subsequent action, that is, grabbing the object attended to. In the second test event, the actor gazed at the old object, but reached for the new object. This event is considered a violation of expectation. When the actor oriented with both her head-and-eyes, subjects looked significantly longer at the second test event in which the actor reached for the object to which she had not previously oriented. However, there was no difference in looking time between test events when the actor used only her eyes to orient. These findings suggest that tamarins are able to use some combination of head orientation and gaze direction, but not gaze direction alone, to predict the actions of a human agent.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3221
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Author Diekamp, B.; Prior, H.; Güntürkün, O.
Title Functional lateralization, interhemispheric transfer and position bias in serial reversal learning in pigeons (Columba livia) Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 4 Pages 187-196
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Abstract In the present study we investigated lateralization of color reversal learning in pigeons. After monocular acquisition of a simple color discrimination with either the left or right eye, birds were tested in a serial reversal procedure. While there was only a slight and non-significant difference in choice accuracy during original color discrimination, a stable superiority of birds using the right eye emerged in serial reversals. Both groups showed a characteristic 'learning-to-learn' effect, but right-eyed subjects improved faster and reached a lower asymptotic error rate. Subsequent testing for interocular transfer demonstrated a difference between pre- and post-shift choice accuracy in pigeons switching from right to left eye but not vice versa. This can be accounted for by differences in maximum performance using either the left or right eye along with an equally efficient but incomplete interocular transfer in both directions. Detailed analysis of the birds' response patterns during serial reversals revealed a preference for the right of two response keys in both groups. This bias was most pronounced at the beginning of a session. It decreased within sessions, but became more pronounced in late reversals, thus indicating a successful strategy for mastering the serial reversal task. Interocular transfer of response patterns revealed an unexpected asymmetry. Birds switching from right to left eye continued to prefer the right side, whereas pigeons shifting from left to right eye were now biased towards the left side. The results suggest that lateralized performance during reversal learning in pigeons rests on a complex interplay of learning about individual stimuli, stimulus dimensions, and lateralized response strategies.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3223
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Author Á. Miklósi
Title The Evolution of Cognition Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 3 Pages 179-180
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Publisher Place of Publication Editor Heyes, C.; Huber, L.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3247
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Author Gould, J.L.; Zabka, T.S.; Malizia, R.W.; Park, A.; Mukerji, J.
Title Possible decision-making preadaptations in the molly Poecilia sphenops Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 2 Pages 91-95
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Abstract In many species females choose a mate from among several available males; in other species, the social system provides no apparent opportunity for making a decision among alternative suitors, and decision-making capacity is assumed to be minimal. The origins, bases, and logic of female mate choices are contentious questions with important cognitive implications. Female short-finned mollies, Poecilia sphenops, have never been observed to choose mates in the wild, where instead a male-contest social system prevails. Nevertheless they readily choose between models of males in the laboratory. Some of their decisions anticipate features found in males in more recently evolved species where the social system permits female choice. The willingness of females to choose traits in a species without such traits or evident need or opportunity for female choice in the wild is remarkable. These observations suggest that choice behavior can be latent in a species, and may direct or bias the development of behavioral preferences.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3254
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Author Soler, M.; Soler, J.J.
Title Innate versus learned recognition of conspecifics in great spotted cuckoos Clamator glandarius Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 2 Pages 97-102
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Abstract When birds raised by another species become adults, they (if they are non-brood-parasitic species) usually attempt to mate with birds of their foster species rather than with birds of their own species, a phenomenon called sexual imprinting. Avian brood parasites lay their eggs in nests of other species (the hosts) that rear the young, but the problem of sexual imprinting among brood parasites has generally been neglected, and brood parasites have been considered as an exception among birds. Here, we show, with data from field observations and field experiments, firstly, that adult great spotted cuckoos Clamator glandarius sometimes maintain contact with both older nestling and fledgling cuckoos. Adult cuckoos visited parasitized nests during the last days of the nestling period (5 observations) and, when parasitic chicks left the nest, adult cuckoos maintained contact with the young (14 observations). Adults and fledgling cuckoos communicated vocally (5 observations), and an adult great spotted cuckoo even fed a parasite fledgling in two cases. Secondly, when experimentally cross-fostered in nests of magpie Pica pica hosts outside the parasite breeding range (thus avoiding visual and acoustic communication with adult cuckoos), young cuckoos did not learn to recognize their own species when only one cuckoo chick was introduced per nest, but they learnt to recognize conspecifics when two cuckoos were reared together. This means that young great spotted cuckoos apparently must learn to recognize conspecifics, that is, recognition is not innate. Social interactions between adult brood parasites and young have also been reported in other brood parasites; thus, brood parasites are probably not an exception to the general phenomenon of imprinting, and young brood parasites may need to be imprinted on conspecifics, although more studies on other brood parasite species are needed to confirm this.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3256
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Author Parr, L.A.; Winslow, J.T.; Hopkins, W.D.
Title Is the inversion effect in rhesus monkeys face-specific? Type Journal Article
Year 1999 Publication Animal Cognition Abbreviated Journal (up) Anim. Cogn.
Volume 2 Issue 3 Pages 123-129
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Abstract This study investigated the face inversion effect in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Face stimuli consisted of ten black-and-white examples of unfamiliar rhesus monkey faces, brown capuchin faces, and human faces. Two non-face categories included ten examples of automobiles and abstract shapes. All stimuli were presented in a sequential matching-to-sample format using an automated joystick-testing paradigm. Subjects performed significantly better on upright than on inverted presentations of automobiles, rhesus monkey and capuchin faces, but not human faces or abstract shapes. These results are inconsistent with data from humans and chimpanzees that show the inversion effect only for categories of stimuli for which subjects have developed expertise. The inversion effect in rhesus monkeys does not appear to be face-specific, and should therefore not be used as a marker of specialized face processing in this species.
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Call Number Equine Behaviour @ team @ Serial 3282
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