Jordan Kerry E, Maclean Evan L, Brannon Elizabeth M
Department of Psychology, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322, USA.
Cognition. 2008 Sep;108(3):617-25. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2008.05.006. Epub 2008 Jun 20.
We report here that monkeys can actively match the number of sounds they hear to the number of shapes they see and present the first evidence that monkeys sum over sounds and sights. In Experiment 1, two monkeys were trained to choose a simultaneous array of 1-9 squares that numerically matched a sample sequence of shapes or sounds. Monkeys numerically matched across (audio-visual) and within (visual-visual) modalities with equal accuracy and transferred to novel numerical values. In Experiment 2, monkeys presented with sample sequences of randomly ordered shapes or tones were able to choose an array of 2-9 squares that was the numerical sum of the shapes and sounds in the sample sequence. In both experiments, accuracy and reaction time depended on the ratio between the correct numerical match and incorrect choice. These findings suggest monkeys and humans share an abstract numerical code that can be divorced from the modality in which stimuli are first experienced.
我们在此报告,猴子能够主动将它们听到的声音数量与看到的形状数量相匹配,并提供了首个证据表明猴子能够对声音和视觉进行求和。在实验1中,两只猴子经过训练,要从1到9个正方形的同时呈现阵列中选择一个在数值上与形状或声音的样本序列相匹配的阵列。猴子在(视听)模态之间以及(视觉-视觉)模态之内进行数值匹配时,准确率相同,并能将这种能力迁移到新的数值上。在实验2中,给猴子呈现随机排列的形状或音调的样本序列,它们能够选择一个由2到9个正方形组成的阵列,该阵列是样本序列中形状和声音的数值总和。在两个实验中,准确率和反应时间都取决于正确数值匹配与错误选择之间的比例关系。这些发现表明,猴子和人类共享一种抽象的数字代码,这种代码可以与最初体验刺激的模态相分离。