Paz-Y-Miño C Guillermo, Bond Alan B, Kamil Alan C, Balda Russell P
Center for Avian Cognition, School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68588, USA.
Nature. 2004 Aug 12;430(7001):778-81. doi: 10.1038/nature02723.
Living in large, stable social groups is often considered to favour the evolution of enhanced cognitive abilities, such as recognizing group members, tracking their social status and inferring relationships among them. An individual's place in the social order can be learned through direct interactions with others, but conflicts can be time-consuming and even injurious. Because the number of possible pairwise interactions increases rapidly with group size, members of large social groups will benefit if they can make judgments about relationships on the basis of indirect evidence. Transitive reasoning should therefore be particularly important for social individuals, allowing assessment of relationships from observations of interactions among others. Although a variety of studies have suggested that transitive inference may be used in social settings, the phenomenon has not been demonstrated under controlled conditions in animals. Here we show that highly social pinyon jays (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus) draw sophisticated inferences about their own dominance status relative to that of strangers that they have observed interacting with known individuals. These results directly demonstrate that animals use transitive inference in social settings and imply that such cognitive capabilities are widespread among social species.
生活在大型、稳定的社会群体中通常被认为有利于增强认知能力的进化,比如识别群体成员、追踪他们的社会地位以及推断他们之间的关系。个体在社会秩序中的位置可以通过与他人的直接互动来了解,但冲突可能会耗费时间甚至造成伤害。由于可能的两两互动数量会随着群体规模的增大而迅速增加,如果大型社会群体的成员能够基于间接证据对关系做出判断,他们将从中受益。因此,传递性推理对社会性个体而言应该尤为重要,它能让个体通过观察其他个体之间的互动来评估关系。尽管各种研究表明传递性推理可能在社会情境中被使用,但这一现象尚未在动物的受控条件下得到证实。在这里,我们表明高度社会化的美洲矮松鸦(Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus)能够对自己相对于陌生个体的优势地位做出复杂的推理,这些陌生个体是它们观察到与已知个体互动的。这些结果直接证明了动物在社会情境中使用传递性推理,并暗示这种认知能力在社会物种中广泛存在。