Institute of Cognitive Neurology and Dementia Research, Otto-Von-Guericke Universität Magdeburg, Leipziger Str. 44, 39120, Magdeburg, Germany.
Anim Cogn. 2011 May;14(3):407-14. doi: 10.1007/s10071-010-0375-0. Epub 2011 Jan 8.
Several recent studies have documented that non-human primates can individuate objects according to property and/or kind information in much the same way as human infants do from around one year of age when they begin to acquire language. Some studies suggest, however, that only some properties are used for the individuation of food items: color, but not shape. The present study investigated whether these findings reveal a true competence problem with shape properties in the food domain or whether they merely reveal a performance problem (e.g., lack of attention to shapes). We tested 25 great apes (chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas) in two food individuation tasks. We manipulated subjects' experience with differences in color and shape properties of food items. Results indicated (i) that all subjects, regardless of their prior experience, solved the color-based object individuation task and (ii) that only the group with previous experience with different shape properties succeeded in the shape-based individuation task. Great apes can thus be primed to take shape into account for individuating food objects, and this results clearly speaks in favor of a performance (rather than a competence) problem in using shape for object individuation of food items.
几项最近的研究记录表明,非人类灵长类动物可以根据属性和/或种类信息来区分物体,这与人类婴儿在大约一岁开始学习语言时的方式非常相似。然而,一些研究表明,只有一些属性被用于区分食物:颜色,但不是形状。本研究旨在探讨这些发现是揭示了食物领域中形状属性的真正能力问题,还是仅仅揭示了表现问题(例如,缺乏对形状的关注)。我们在两项食物区分任务中测试了 25 只大型猿类(黑猩猩、倭黑猩猩和大猩猩)。我们操纵了被试者对食物项目颜色和形状属性差异的经验。结果表明:(i)所有被试者,无论其先前的经验如何,都解决了基于颜色的物体区分任务;(ii)只有先前有过不同形状属性经验的组成功完成了基于形状的区分任务。因此,大型猿类可以被激发考虑形状来区分食物物体,这一结果明确支持在使用形状来区分食物物体时存在表现(而非能力)问题。