Kendrick K M, Atkins K, Hinton M R, Heavens P, Keverne B
The Babraham Institute, Babraham, Cambridge CB2 4AT, UK.
Sub-Department of Animal Behaviour, University of Cambridge, Madingley, Cambridge CB3 8AA, UK.
Behav Processes. 1996 Oct;38(1):19-35. doi: 10.1016/0376-6357(96)00006-x.
We have previously shown that sheep, like monkeys, have neural circuits within the temporal lobe that respond preferentially to faces. They can also discriminate between sheep, humans and other animals on the basis of facial cues using an enclosed Y-maze. In the present study we investigated the speed with which Clun Forest sheep learn to discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar faces, as opposed to symbols, in order to gain a food reward using the same Y-maze apparatus. Animals (n = 10) received 1 day of training where projected images of the pairs of faces or symbols were paired for 20 trials with a picture of either an empty or full bucket of food (which indicated which choice of face or symbol would result in the animal receiving a food reward) and on the next 4 days they were given a further 20 trials a day with the faces or symbols alone. Results showed that sheep learned significantly faster (by day 1 or 2 post training) to recognise sheep faces of a familiar breed compared to geometrical symbols (3-4 days post training). Learning using faces of animals of another unfamiliar breed was also significantly better than for symbols but was significantly worse than that seen using faces of a familiar breed. Inverting the faces significantly reduced learning speed for faces of a familiar breed but not for that of an unfamiliar one. Inverting familiar objects, food buckets, also did not impair discriminatory performance. In a further set of trials where discrimination learning was made more difficult by excluding cued trials and reducing the number of daily trials to eight, social familiarity was found to further improve the animal's ability to learn to discriminate between the faces of a familiar breed. Finally, while discriminatory performance for adult sheep faces was very good, that for young lamb faces was poor, with only one animal learning to choose the face associated with food. It was confirmed in maternal ewes that they were also slow to learn to recognise the faces of their lambs (2-3 weeks). Overall these results show that sheep can learn to distinguish between individual adult sheep faces but that breed and social familiarity influence the level of performance. Further, discrimination learning of familiar and unfamiliar facial stimuli is better than between simple geometrical symbols, indicating that faces may be preferentially processed by the brain compared to other objects suggesting that faces are indeed special in this species as has been claimed for human and non-human primates.
我们之前已经表明,绵羊和猴子一样,在颞叶内有神经回路,对面部有优先反应。它们还能使用封闭式Y迷宫,根据面部线索区分绵羊、人类和其他动物。在本研究中,我们调查了克伦森林羊学会区分熟悉和不熟悉面孔(而非符号)的速度,以便使用相同的Y迷宫装置获得食物奖励。动物(n = 10)接受了1天的训练,在训练中,成对的面孔或符号的投影图像与空的或装满食物的桶的图片配对进行20次试验(这表明选择哪种面孔或符号会使动物获得食物奖励),接下来的4天里,它们每天再单独面对面孔或符号进行20次试验。结果显示,与几何符号相比,绵羊学习识别熟悉品种绵羊面孔的速度显著更快(训练后第1天或第2天)(识别几何符号在训练后3 - 4天)。使用另一个不熟悉品种动物的面孔进行学习也明显优于使用符号,但明显不如使用熟悉品种面孔的学习效果。颠倒面孔显著降低了熟悉品种面孔的学习速度,但对不熟悉品种的面孔则没有影响。颠倒熟悉的物体——食物桶,也不会损害辨别性能。在另一组试验中,通过排除提示试验并将每日试验次数减少到8次,使辨别学习变得更加困难,结果发现社交熟悉度进一步提高了动物学习区分熟悉品种面孔的能力。最后,虽然成年绵羊面孔的辨别性能非常好,但幼羊面孔的辨别性能很差,只有一只动物学会选择与食物相关的面孔。在母羊中得到证实,它们学习识别自己羔羊面孔的速度也很慢(2 - 3周)。总体而言,这些结果表明绵羊能够学会区分成年绵羊个体的面孔,但品种和社交熟悉度会影响表现水平。此外,对熟悉和不熟悉面部刺激的辨别学习优于对简单几何符号的辨别学习,这表明与其他物体相比,大脑可能对面部进行优先处理,这表明面孔在这个物种中确实如人类和非人类灵长类动物一样是特殊的。