Primate Cognition
Social Learning Mechanisms
Mechanisms Stimulus or Social Enhancement (instrumental) Drawn to object/conspecific, learn via trial and error Observational Learning (classical) UR caused by a conspecific Mimicry (“Monkey See-Monkey Do”) Copy for copying sake Imitation (copy to get goal) Copy to get the same goal as the demonstrator
Theory of Mind Understanding that others have mental processes that may differ from one’s own Emotions Knowledge Visual Perspective
Knowledge Attribution Povinelli (1991) Knower – sees food being hidden Guesser – outside of room Stage 1: As above Stage 2: Knower wears hat Stage 3: Guesser stays in room with a bagged head
Chimpanzees (Great Apes) Rhesus Monkeys (New World)
Alternative Chimps discriminated between the two situations based on subtle differences in what the “guesser” and “knower” did. “Choose the one with eyes open during hiding”
“Begging Experiment” Povinelli (1999) Beg from “seeing” vs. “nonseeing” Front vs. Back – Yes Pail Beside vs. Over Head - No Averted Eyes vs. Over Shoulder Look – No Blindfold Mouth vs. Blindfold Eyes - No
“Chimps Fail Begging Experiment”
“Elephants Pass Begging Experiment” However, this doesn’t imply elephants can “mind-read”
Mark Test Gallup’s Mark Test (Great Apes)
Mark Test Mirror self-recognition: Chimp, Bonobo – Yes Orang-utan, Gorilla – Yes Elephants – Maybe? Dolphins –Maybe? Pigeons –No
Human versus Chimps Mind-reading Pointing Impulsive Cooperation Imitation Vis Memory Aud Memory Deception Poor No More Trainable Short-cuts Better Good Poor Good Yes Less Spontaneous Slavishly Good Better Excellent Skill ChimpHuman
Deception Learned by Accident, Intentional, or Species-Specific? Chimps may act differently based on whether something is found in another’s line of sight Chimps Food-storing birds re-caching if watched by a conspecific (also if they seem themselves in a mirror)
Chimp Deception
Re-Caching By Crows