Vonk Jennifer
York University, 4700 Keele Street,Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
Anim Cogn. 2003 Jun;6(2):77-86. doi: 10.1007/s10071-003-0159-x. Epub 2003 Mar 1.
Four orangutans and one gorilla matched images in a delayed matching-to-sample (DMTS) task based on the relationship between items depicted in those images, thus demonstrating understanding of both first- and second-order relations. Subjects matched items on the basis of identity, color, or shape (first-order relations, experiment 1) or same shape, same color between items (second-order relations, experiment 2). Four of the five subjects performed above chance on the second-order relations DMTS task within the first block of five sessions. High levels of performance on this task did not result from reliance on perceptual feature matching and thus indicate the capability for abstract relational concepts in two species of great ape.
在一项延迟匹配样本(DMTS)任务中,四只猩猩和一只大猩猩根据图片中所描绘物品之间的关系匹配图片,从而证明了它们对一阶和二阶关系的理解。实验对象根据物品的相同性、颜色或形状(一阶关系,实验1)或物品之间相同的形状、相同的颜色(二阶关系,实验2)来匹配物品。在五个实验环节的第一个环节中,五只实验对象中有四只在二阶关系DMTS任务中的表现高于随机水平。这项任务中的高水平表现并非源于对感知特征匹配的依赖,因此表明两种大猩猩具备抽象关系概念的能力。