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Published byRandall Baldwin Modified over 9 years ago
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Psychology 3906 Animal Cognition Dr. Dave Brodbeck
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Introduction OK, the book is called ‘Cognition, Evolution and Behavior’ so, we had better know about all of the above Now of course most of this is review…
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Cognition Cognition is about mechanism The perception, storage, processing and retrieval of information Some internal representation of the external Functioning isomorphisms Not consciousness
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Not consciousness, but… We do use the terms though Emotion Fear To know And indeed, perhaps one day someone will be able to study consciousness
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Is all complex behaviour “cognitive?” Well it need not be Indeed it could be a simple S-R type of thing. The complexity of a behaviour is not necessarily an indication of complicated cognition You knew it was coming…..
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In a Moth’s Ear…. Moth Ear basically has two neurons A1 and A2 They are not frequency sensitive, but do not respond to low frequencies
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Those would be some tiny Q tips…..
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Do Moths Have Ear Wax? A1 is responsive to intensity More firing with closer bat A2 only fires with very loud sounds A2 fires, bat must be very close
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Moths and Bats, Charts and Graphs A1 on the left fires, that wing beats faster Moth’s course corrects to 180 degrees from bat So very and totally cool A2, go crazy 2 neuron ear can encode where a predator in in 3 dimensional space!!!
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Why does an animal behave the way it does? Cause (proximate cause) Development Function (ultimate cause) Evolution Do not mix these up! Why do birds migrate? Innate vs. learned Nature vs. nurture
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Approaches to the Study of Comparative Cognition Traditional or Anthropocentric approach People can do x I wonder if rats can? Probably still the most popular approach, even when people say they don’t do it..
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Characteristics of the Traditional Approach Focuses on memory, representation etc, just like in humans The choice of the species to be studied is based primarily on convenience The notion of a phylogenetic scale
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MacPhail Probably best example is MacPhail No differences have been found between species that cannot be explained by motivation We must, therefore, accept H 0 Except for humans of course, we are all special..
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The Synthetic Approach This approach sees the MacPhailian ideas as illogical Instead lets look at behaviour from an evolutionary perspective Look at behaviour in the field Choose species/problems based on these Make predictions about mechanism
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But what about the motivation thing? Error cancels baby Plus, how likely is it to find a pattern of results, that fits with your hypothesis that is by dumb luck, also due to motivation There should be patterns of results in essence
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Natural Selection The Theory of Natural Selection is so simple that anyone can misunderstand it…. (Anonymous) Charles Darwin (1809-1882) saw three problems in need of a solution. –Darwin was not the only one to see these problems BTW –Other ‘Naturalists’ were struggling with the same issues
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Problem the First There is change over time in the flora and fauna of the Earth –What we would commonly call ‘evolution’ today –The fossil record showed this to be pretty clear, even to people in the mid 1800s –This was not controversial in Darwin’s time, and is not now.
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The Second Problem There is a taxonomic relationship among living things –People were big into classifying stuff –It was pretty obvious that there was a relationship between different species Different birds, different grasses, different cats etc
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The Third Problem Adaptation –Different kinds of teeth for different animals, say carnivore ripping teeth and herbivore grinding teeth –Different tissues within species Heart vs. eye etc.
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The Solution! Natural Selection provides a mechanistic account of how these things occurred and shows how they are intimately related. It is one of those ‘oh man is that ever easy, why didn’t I think of that?’ type things.
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How’s it work? There is competition among living things –More are born or hatched or whatever, than survive and reproduce Reproduction occurs with variation –This variation is heritable –Remember, there was NO genetics back then, Chuck knew, he just knew…. –Realized that is wasn’t ‘blending’
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How’s it Work? Selection Determines which individuals enter the adult breeding population –This selection is done by the environment –Those which are best suited reproduce –They pass these well suited characteristics on to their young
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How’s it Work? REPRODUCTION is the key, not merely survival If you survive to be 128 but have no kids, you are not doing as well as I am I have reproduced… Assuming the traits that made me successful will help them then I amore fit NOW than the 128 year old guy
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This lecture keeps evolving….. Survival of the Fittest (which Chucky D NEVER said) means those who have the most offspring that reproduce So, the answer to the trilogy of problems is: ‘Descent with modification from a common ancestor, NOT random modification, but, modification shaped by natural selection’
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Other Evolutionary Theories Lamarckism –Inheritance of acquired characteristics E.g., giraffes really wanted leaves, so they stretched their necks and….. Sounds crazy, but a lot of people think this way ‘We will all have giant heads and tiny bodies someday’ ‘Cave swelling fish don’t use their eyes so they disappear’ ‘We don’t use our appendix so it is disappearing’
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Silly incorrect evolutionary theories and ideas Orthogenesis –There is some plan to evolution. –NO WRONG INCORRECT, THANKS FOR PLAYING –The idea of an ‘evolutionary ladder’ fits in here –It is wrong too……
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Still another silly idea Intelligent Design Just Creationism with a fancy name God does not belong in a science class, any more than experiments belong in church NOT A SCIENTIFIC THEORY
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How do we know if a behaviour is an adaptation? Experimentation Comparative method modeling
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