Parrish Audrey E, Beran Michael J
Language Research Center, Georgia State University, University Plaza, Atlanta, GA, 30302, USA,
Anim Cogn. 2014 Mar;17(2):427-34. doi: 10.1007/s10071-013-0674-3. Epub 2013 Aug 15.
We investigated whether chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) misperceived food portion sizes depending upon the context in which they were presented, something that often affects how much humans serve themselves and subsequently consume. Chimpanzees judged same-sized and smaller food portions to be larger in amount when presented on a small plate compared to an equal or larger food portion presented on a large plate and did so despite clearly being able to tell the difference in portions when plate size was identical. These results are consistent with data from the human literature in which people misperceive food portion sizes as a function of plate size. This misperception is attributed to the Delboeuf illusion which occurs when the size of a central item is misperceived on the basis of its surrounding context. These results demonstrate a cross-species shared visual misperception of portion size that affects choice behavior, here in a nonhuman species for which there is little experience with tests that involve choosing between food amounts on dinnerware. The biases resulting in this form of misperception of food portions appear to have a deep-rooted evolutionary history which we share with, at minimum, our closest living nonhuman relative, the chimpanzee.
我们研究了黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)是否会根据食物呈现的背景来误判食物分量,这种情况经常会影响人类为自己提供食物的量以及随后的食量。与放在大盘子上的等量或更大的食物分量相比,当放在小盘子上时,黑猩猩会判断相同大小和更小的食物分量数量更多,而且尽管在盘子大小相同时它们显然能够分辨出分量的差异,但它们还是会这样做。这些结果与人类文献中的数据一致,在人类文献中,人们会根据盘子大小误判食物分量。这种误判归因于德勃夫错觉,即当根据中心物体周围的背景来误判其大小时就会出现这种错觉。这些结果表明,在影响选择行为方面,存在一种跨物种共有的对分量大小的视觉误判,这里指的是在一个对涉及在餐具上选择食物量的测试几乎没有经验的非人类物种中。导致这种对食物分量误判形式的偏差似乎有着根深蒂固的进化历史,至少我们与现存关系最近的非人类近亲黑猩猩共同拥有这一历史。