Taylor Alex H, Hunt Gavin R, Holzhaider Jennifer C, Gray Russell D
Department of Psychology, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand.
Curr Biol. 2007 Sep 4;17(17):1504-7. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2007.07.057. Epub 2007 Aug 16.
A crucial stage in hominin evolution was the development of metatool use -- the ability to use one tool on another [1, 2]. Although the great apes can solve metatool tasks [3, 4], monkeys have been less successful [5-7]. Here we provide experimental evidence that New Caledonian crows can spontaneously solve a demanding metatool task in which a short tool is used to extract a longer tool that can then be used to obtain meat. Six out of the seven crows initially attempted to extract the long tool with the short tool. Four successfully obtained meat on the first trial. The experiments revealed that the crows did not solve the metatool task by trial-and-error learning during the task or through a previously learned rule. The sophisticated physical cognition shown appears to have been based on analogical reasoning. The ability to reason analogically may explain the exceptional tool-manufacturing skills of New Caledonian crows.
人类进化中的一个关键阶段是元工具使用的发展——即在一个工具上使用另一个工具的能力[1,2]。尽管大猩猩能够解决元工具任务[3,4],但猴子在这方面却不太成功[5-7]。在此,我们提供实验证据表明,新喀里多尼亚乌鸦能够自发地解决一项具有挑战性的元工具任务,即使用一个短工具来取出一个长工具,然后用这个长工具获取肉。七只乌鸦中有六只最初试图用短工具取出长工具。四只在第一次尝试时就成功获取了肉。实验表明,这些乌鸦并非通过在任务过程中的试错学习或通过先前学到的规则来解决元工具任务。所展现出的复杂物理认知似乎是基于类比推理。类比推理能力或许可以解释新喀里多尼亚乌鸦卓越的工具制造技能。