Vallentin Daniela, Nieder Andreas
Department of Animal Physiology, Institute of Zoology, University of Tuebingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, 72076 Tuebingen, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2008 Sep 23;18(18):1420-5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.08.042.
Primate brains are equipped with evolutionarily old and dedicated neural circuits so that they can grasp absolute quantities, such as the number of items or the length of a line. Absolute magnitude, however, is often not informative enough to guide decisions in conflicting social and foraging situations that require an assessment of quantity ratios. We report that rhesus monkeys can discriminate proportions (1:4, 2:4, 3:4, and 4:4) specified by bars differing in lengths and that they can do so at a precision comparable to that shown by humans; the monkeys thus demonstrate an abstract understanding of proportionality. Moreover, neurons in the lateral prefrontal cortex selectively responded to preferred proportions regardless of the exact physical appearance of the stimuli. These results support the hypothesis that nonhuman primates can judge proportions and utilize the underlying information in behaviorally relevant situations.
灵长类动物的大脑配备了进化上古老且专门的神经回路,以便它们能够掌握绝对数量,例如物品的数量或线条的长度。然而,在需要评估数量比例的冲突性社会和觅食情境中,绝对数量往往不足以提供足够的信息来指导决策。我们报告称,恒河猴能够区分由不同长度的条形表示的比例(1:4、2:4、3:4和4:4),并且它们能够以与人类相当的精度做到这一点;因此,猴子展现出了对比例的抽象理解。此外,外侧前额叶皮层中的神经元会选择性地对偏好的比例做出反应,而不管刺激的确切物理外观如何。这些结果支持了这样一种假设,即非人类灵长类动物能够判断比例,并在行为相关的情境中利用潜在信息。