Christoph J Völter, Brandon Tinklenberg, Josep Call, Amanda M Seed
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Although showing an initial bias to approach these sealed cups with visible food, the chimpanzees learned to avoid them more quickly across sessions compared to a color discrimination. They also learned a color discrimination more quickly if the incorrect cups were sealed such that a piece of food could never be hidden inside them. In Experiment 2, visible food of 2 different types was sealed in the upper part of the cups: 1 type signaled the presence of food reward hidden underneath; the cups with the other type were sealed. The chimpanzees learned more quickly in a congruent condition (the to-be-chosen food cue matched the reward) than in an incongruent condition (the to-be-avoided food cue matched the reward). Together, these findings highlight that performance in inhibition tasks is affected by several other cognitive abilities such as object knowledge, memory, and learning, which need to be quantified before meaningful comparisons can be drawn. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
抑制任务通常要求受试者在竞争性行动计划具有优势时施加控制以正确行动。在比较心理学中,对现有抑制任务的一个关注是,抑制控制对表现的相对贡献(与学习或对象知识相比)很少得到明确的研究。我们通过给黑猩猩一个空间觅食任务来解决这个问题,在这个任务中,它们可以通过学习诱饵来更有效地获取食物。在实验1中,我们研究了那些能引起强势接近反应的物体,比如装有食物的透明杯子,是如何影响他们的学习速度的。尽管黑猩猩最初倾向于接近这些装有可见食物的密封杯子,但与颜色歧视相比,它们学会了在整个过程中更快地避开它们。如果把不正确的杯子密封起来,这样食物就永远不会藏在杯子里,它们还能更快地学会辨别颜色。在实验2中,两种不同类型的可见食物被密封在杯子的上部:一种类型表示隐藏在下面的食物奖励的存在;另一种杯子是密封的。黑猩猩在一致的条件下(待选择的食物线索与奖励相匹配)比在不一致的条件下(待避免的食物线索与奖励相匹配)学习得更快。总之,这些发现强调了抑制任务的表现受到其他几种认知能力的影响,如对象知识、记忆和学习,这些能力需要在进行有意义的比较之前进行量化。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
Inhibitory control and cue relevance modulate chimpanzees' (Pan troglodytes) performance in a spatial foraging task.
Inhibition tasks usually require subjects to exert control to act correctly when a competing action plan is prepotent. In comparative psychology, one concern about the existing inhibition tasks is that the relative contribution of inhibitory control to performance (as compared to learning or object knowledge) is rarely explicitly investigated. We addressed this problem by presenting chimpanzees with a spatial foraging task in which they could acquire food more efficiently by learning which objects were baited. In Experiment 1, we examined how objects that elicited a prepotent approach response, transparent cups containing food, affected their learning rates. Although showing an initial bias to approach these sealed cups with visible food, the chimpanzees learned to avoid them more quickly across sessions compared to a color discrimination. They also learned a color discrimination more quickly if the incorrect cups were sealed such that a piece of food could never be hidden inside them. In Experiment 2, visible food of 2 different types was sealed in the upper part of the cups: 1 type signaled the presence of food reward hidden underneath; the cups with the other type were sealed. The chimpanzees learned more quickly in a congruent condition (the to-be-chosen food cue matched the reward) than in an incongruent condition (the to-be-avoided food cue matched the reward). Together, these findings highlight that performance in inhibition tasks is affected by several other cognitive abilities such as object knowledge, memory, and learning, which need to be quantified before meaningful comparisons can be drawn. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Comparative Psychology publishes original research from a comparative perspective
on the behavior, cognition, perception, and social relationships of diverse species.