Mulcahy Nicholas J, Call Josep
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
J Comp Psychol. 2009 Aug;123(3):304-9. doi: 10.1037/a0016222.
The object-choice task tests animals' ability to use human-given cues to find a hidden reward located in 1 of 2 (or more) containers. Great apes are generally unskillful in this task whereas other species including dogs (Canis familiaris) and goats (Capra hircus) can use human-given cues to locate the reward. However, great apes are typically positioned proximal to the containers when receiving the experimenter's cue whereas other species are invariably positioned distally. The authors investigated how the position of the subject, the human giving the cue and the containers (and the distance among them) affected the performance of 19 captive great apes. Compared to the proximal condition, the distal condition involved larger distances and, critically, it reduced the potential ambiguity of the cues as well as the strong influence that the sight of the containers may have had when subjects received the cue. Subjects were far more successful in the distal compared to the proximal condition. The authors suggest several possibilities to account for this difference and discuss our findings in relation to previous and future object-choice research.
目标选择任务测试动物利用人类给出的线索来找到隐藏在两个(或更多)容器之一中的奖励的能力。大猩猩通常在这项任务中表现不熟练,而包括狗(家犬)和山羊(山羊属)在内的其他物种能够利用人类给出的线索来找到奖励。然而,大猩猩在接收实验者的线索时通常靠近容器,而其他物种总是在远处。作者研究了受试者的位置、给出线索的人以及容器的位置(以及它们之间的距离)如何影响19只圈养大猩猩的表现。与近端条件相比,远端条件涉及更大的距离,关键的是,它减少了线索的潜在模糊性,以及当受试者接收线索时容器的视觉可能产生的强烈影响。与近端条件相比,受试者在远端条件下的成功率要高得多。作者提出了几种可能性来解释这种差异,并结合之前和未来的目标选择研究讨论了我们的发现。