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1.
Learn Behav ; 51(4): 413-427, 2023 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37369920

RESUMO

The outcome of an action often occurs after a delay. One solution for learning appropriate actions from delayed outcomes is to rely on a chain of state transitions. Another solution, which does not rest on state transitions, is to use an eligibility trace (ET) that directly bridges a current outcome and multiple past actions via transient memories. Previous studies revealed that humans (Homo sapiens) learned appropriate actions in a behavioral task in which solutions based on the ET were effective but transition-based solutions were ineffective. This suggests that ET may be used in human learning systems. However, no studies have examined nonhuman animals with an equivalent behavioral task. We designed a task for nonhuman animals following a previous human study. In each trial, participants chose one of two stimuli that were randomly selected from three stimulus types: a stimulus associated with a food reward delivered immediately, a stimulus associated with a reward delivered after a few trials, and a stimulus associated with no reward. The presented stimuli did not vary according to the participants' choices. To maximize the total reward, participants had to learn the value of the stimulus associated with a delayed reward. Five chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) performed the task using a touchscreen. Two chimpanzees were able to learn successfully, indicating that learning mechanisms that do not depend on state transitions were involved in the learning processes. The current study extends previous ET research by proposing a behavioral task and providing empirical data from chimpanzees.


Assuntos
Aprendizagem , Pan troglodytes , Humanos , Animais , Reforço Psicológico , Recompensa , Alimentos
2.
Iperception ; 13(6): 20416695221137731, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36408462

RESUMO

The "slime hand illusion" is a simple and robust technique that uses mirror-visual feedback to produce a nonproprioceptive ownership distortion. The illusion can be easily evoked by the participant watching the experimenter pinching and pulling a chunk of slime in a mirror while the participant's hand, hidden behind the mirror, is similarly manipulated. This procedure produces a feeling of one of their fingers or the skin of their whole hand being stretched or deformed in a similar way to the visible slime. A public experiment found that more than 90% of participants reported a strong sense of skin or finger stretching. This report details a laboratory experiment performed to characterize the mechanisms behind the illusion more robustly. It reproduced this result and found that participants experienced a drift in their sense of skin location of approximately 30 cm on average, which is beyond the conventionally accepted range of proprioceptive drift.

3.
J Comp Psychol ; 136(1): 44-53, 2022 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34855426

RESUMO

Calls of several species of nonhuman animals are considered to be functionally referential. However, the cognitive mechanisms underlying audience behaviors remain unclear. This study used an audiovisual cross-modal preferential-looking paradigm to examine whether captive chimpanzees spontaneously associated a conspecific call with images of a corresponding item. Chimpanzees were presented with videos of snakes and fruit side-by-side while hearing playbacks of alarm calls, food-associated calls, or no sound (as a baseline condition). Chimpanzees looked at videos of snakes for longer when hearing alarm calls compared with food calls or baseline. However, chimpanzees did not look at videos of fruit for longer when hearing food calls compared with baseline. An additional experiment tested whether chimpanzees' gaze bias to the snake videos was driven by negative affective states in general via affect-driven attention biases. When chimpanzees were presented with the same snake and fruit videos while hearing playbacks of conspecific screams or no sound, they exhibited no gaze bias for snake videos. These results suggest that chimpanzees spontaneously associated alarm calls with images of a potential threat in a preferential-looking experiment and that this response was not simply driven by an affective state matching process. These findings should be interpreted in consideration of a procedural limitation related to pseudoreplication in the experimental stimuli. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Pan troglodytes , Serpentes , Animais , Viés , Emoções , Audição , Pan troglodytes/fisiologia
4.
Sci Total Environ ; 796: 148929, 2021 Nov 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34328892

RESUMO

Forests are important sources of dissolved radiocesium (137Cs) discharge downstream. To improve understanding of dissolved 137Cs discharge processes during rainstorms, we investigated the relationship between rainfall-runoff hydrological processes and the discharge of 137Cs leached from litter. Leaching tests were conducted with broadleaf litter collected in the area where saturated overland flow was generated during rainstorms in a broadleaf-tree-dominated forest. According to the leaching test results, the 137Cs leaching rate was higher in the early stage of the test and decreased afterward. There was no significant difference in the overall results between the agitation and non-agitation cases. The 137Cs leaching rate from litter after the 24-h test was up to 33.7%. A large proportion of the original 137Cs activity was present even after the tests, as leaching from litter during rainstorms in the headwater area could be an additional source of dissolved 137Cs in the stream water. If mixing of 137Cs originating from groundwater, soil water, and rainfall with the hydrological processes is assumed, differences between the observed and estimated 137Cs in the surface runoff water became larger under high flow conditions. This analysis indicates additional 137Cs loading on surface runoff water during rainstorms, where saturated surface area can expand as the surface runoff rate increases. Contact area between surface runoff and litter accumulated on the forest floor should increase and accelerate 137Cs leaching from the litter. Therefore, 137Cs leaching in the saturated surface area that is temporarily formed during rainstorms can play a principal role in dissolved 137Cs discharge during rainfall-runoff events. Contaminated litter in the temporally saturated region of forested headwaters is an important factor contributing to elevated levels of dissolved 137Cs during rainstorms in the Fukushima area.


Assuntos
Acidente Nuclear de Fukushima , Monitoramento de Radiação , Poluentes Radioativos do Solo , Florestas , Poluentes Radioativos do Solo/análise , Árvores
5.
Primates ; 62(5): 735-747, 2021 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34302253

RESUMO

Visual processing of the body movements of other animals is important for adaptive animal behaviors. It is widely known that animals can distinguish articulated animal movements even when they are just represented by points of light such that only information about biological motion is retained. However, the extent to which nonhuman great apes comprehend the underlying structural and physiological constraints affecting each moving body part, i.e., biomechanics, is still unclear. To address this, we examined the understanding of biomechanics in bonobos (Pan paniscus) and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), following a previous study on humans (Homo sapiens). Apes underwent eye tracking while viewing three-dimensional computer-generated (CG) animations of biomechanically possible or impossible elbow movements performed by a human, robot, or nonhuman ape. Overall, apes did not differentiate their gaze between possible and impossible movements of elbows. However, some apes looked at elbows for longer when viewing impossible vs. possible robot movements, which indicates that they may have had knowledge of biomechanics and that this knowledge could be extended to a novel agent. These mixed results make it difficult to draw a firm conclusion regarding the extent to which apes understand biomechanics. We discuss some methodological features that may be responsible for the results, as well as implications for future nonhuman animal studies involving the presentation of CG animations or measurement of gaze behaviors.


Assuntos
Tecnologia de Rastreamento Ocular , Hominidae , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Computadores , Pan paniscus , Pan troglodytes
7.
Psychoneuroendocrinology ; 125: 105119, 2021 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33388536

RESUMO

Oxytocin has drawn significant research attention for its role in modulating mammalian social behavior. Despite generally conserved roles, oxytocin can function differently even in closely related species. Previous studies have shown that bonobos and chimpanzees, humans' two closest relatives, demonstrate considerable behavioral differences, including that bonobos look more at others' eyes than chimpanzees. Oxytocin is known to increase attention to another's eyes in many mammalian species (e.g. dogs, monkeys, and humans), yet this effect has not been tested in any nonhuman great ape species. This study examined how intranasally-administered oxytocin affects eye contact in bonobos and chimpanzees using eye tracking. Following administration of either oxytocin or saline control with a nebulizer, chimpanzees (n = 6) and bonobos (n = 5) were shown images of conspecific faces while their eye movement was recorded. Oxytocin changed the eye-looking behavior of bonobos and chimpanzees differently. We found that oxytocin increased eye contact in bonobos but not chimpanzees; while one chimpanzee showed an increase, interestingly, 5 out of 6 chimpanzees showed decreased looking to the eyes compared to the mouth, suggesting moderate eye avoidance. Given the importance of eye contact in their social interactions, our results suggest that oxytocin may play modulatory roles in bonobos' and chimpanzees' species-specific social behavior and underscore the importance of oxytocin in hominid social evolution.


Assuntos
Pan paniscus , Pan troglodytes , Animais , Ocitocina/farmacologia , Comportamento Social , Especificidade da Espécie
8.
J Comp Psychol ; 135(2): 185-195, 2021 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33252921

RESUMO

In intertemporal choice (ITC) tasks, animals are presented with alternative choices between a smaller reward that becomes available sooner and a larger reward that becomes available later. To equate the duration of a trial across the 2 options, postreward delays (PRDs) are inserted after the delivery of the reward. Animals need to incorporate this to increase the long-term reward rate. However, recent studies suggest that they have difficulty understanding the contingency associated with PRDs. Previous research indicates that chimpanzees exhibit particularly great self-control in ITC tasks, but it remains unclear whether chimpanzees do so when considering PRDs. Therefore, we used touchscreen experiments to explore chimpanzee intertemporal preferences when trial duration was equated by a PRD as well as when the PRD was eliminated. The computerized setting was used to try to control delay length flexibly and precisely while reducing the impact of the interaction with human experimenters. Moreover, choice options were presented on touchscreens using symbolic cues. This may reduce the impact of seeing food rewards on making a choice (i.e., the animals' robust tendency to reach for the larger amount of food). In an ITC task in which the trial duration was equated, 4 chimpanzees preferred larger rewards but chose smaller rewards more often when the ratio of the reward amount was smaller. In an ITC task with no PRDs, 2 of 4 chimpanzees did switch their preference to smaller rewards and enhanced the reward rate although this result should be interpreted in light of some methodological limitations. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Desvalorização pelo Atraso , Pan troglodytes , Animais , Comportamento de Escolha , Alimentos , Humanos , Recompensa
9.
PLoS One ; 14(10): e0223675, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31648222

RESUMO

Inferring the evolutionary history of cognitive abilities requires large and diverse samples. However, such samples are often beyond the reach of individual researchers or institutions, and studies are often limited to small numbers of species. Consequently, methodological and site-specific-differences across studies can limit comparisons between species. Here we introduce the ManyPrimates project, which addresses these challenges by providing a large-scale collaborative framework for comparative studies in primate cognition. To demonstrate the viability of the project we conducted a case study of short-term memory. In this initial study, we were able to include 176 individuals from 12 primate species housed at 11 sites across Africa, Asia, North America and Europe. All subjects were tested in a delayed-response task using consistent methodology across sites. Individuals could access food rewards by remembering the position of the hidden reward after a 0, 15, or 30-second delay. Overall, individuals performed better with shorter delays, as predicted by previous studies. Phylogenetic analysis revealed a strong phylogenetic signal for short-term memory. Although, with only 12 species, the validity of this analysis is limited, our initial results demonstrate the feasibility of a large, collaborative open-science project. We present the ManyPrimates project as an exciting opportunity to address open questions in primate cognition and behaviour with large, diverse datasets.

10.
Anim Cogn ; 22(5): 807-823, 2019 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31183591

RESUMO

Previous studies have shown that humans experience negative emotions when seeing contextual cues of others' pain, such as injury (i.e., empathic pain), even without observing behavioral expressions of distress. However, this phenomenon has not been examined in nonhuman primates. We tested six chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) to experimentally examine their reactions to others' injury. First, we measured viewing responses using eye-tracking. Chimpanzees spontaneously attended to injured conspecifics more than non-injured conspecifics, but did not do so in a control condition in which images of injuries were scrambled while maintaining color information. Chimpanzees did not avoid viewing injuries at any point during stimulus presentation. Second, we used thermal imaging to investigate chimpanzees' physiological responses to others' injury. Previous studies reported that reduced nasal temperature is a characteristic of arousal, particularly arousal associated with negative valence. We presented chimpanzees with a realistic injury: a familiar human experimenter with a prosthetic wound and artificial running blood. Chimpanzees exhibited a greater nasal temperature reduction in response to injury compared with the control stimulus. Finally, chimpanzees were presented with a familiar experimenter who stabbed their (fake) thumb with a needle, with no running blood, a situation that may be more challenging in terms of understanding the cause of distress. Chimpanzees did not physiologically distinguish this condition from the control condition. These results suggest that chimpanzees inspect others' injuries and become aroused by seeing injuries even without observing behavioral cues, but have difficulty doing so without explicit (or familiar) cues (i.e., open wound and blood).


Assuntos
Atenção , Empatia , Pan troglodytes , Animais , Compreensão , Sinais (Psicologia) , Pan troglodytes/psicologia , Visão Ocular , Ferimentos e Lesões
11.
Nature ; 546(7657): 227-233, 2017 06 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28593973

RESUMO

One of the key assumptions of the standard model of particle physics is that the interactions of the charged leptons, namely electrons, muons and taus, differ only because of their different masses. Whereas precision tests comparing processes involving electrons and muons have not revealed any definite violation of this assumption, recent studies of B-meson decays involving the higher-mass tau lepton have resulted in observations that challenge lepton universality at the level of four standard deviations. A confirmation of these results would point to new particles or interactions, and could have profound implications for our understanding of particle physics.

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