Sayers Ken, Evans Theodore A, Menzel Emilie, Smith J David, Beran Michael J
Language Research Center, Georgia State University, 3401 Panthersville Rd., Decatur GA 30034, USA.
Department of Psychology and Center for Cognitive Science, University at Buffalo, the State University of New York, 346 Park Hall, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA.
Behaviour. 2015;152(6):727-756. doi: 10.1163/1568539X-00003251.
Metacognition, the monitoring of one's own mental states, is a fundamental aspect of human intellect. Despite tests in nonhuman animals suggestive of uncertainty monitoring, some authors interpret these results solely in terms of primitive psychological mechanisms and reinforcement regimes, where "reinforcement" is invariably considered to be the delivery and consumption of earned food rewards. Surprisingly, few studies have detailed the trial-by-trial behaviour of animals engaged in such tasks. Here we report ethology-based observations on a rhesus monkey completing sparse-dense discrimination problems, and given the option of escaping trials (i.e., responding "uncertain") at its own choosing. Uncertainty responses were generally made on trials of high objective difficulty, and were characterized by long latencies before beginning visible trials, long times taken for response, and, even after controlling for difficulty, high degrees of wavering during response. Incorrect responses were also common in trials of high objective difficulty, but were characterized by low degrees of wavering. This speaks to the likely adaptive nature of "hesitation," and is inconsistent with models which argue or predict implicit, inflexible information-seeking or "alternative option" behaviours whenever challenging problems present themselves, Confounding models which suggest that nonhuman behaviour in metacognition tasks is driven solely by food delivery/consumption, the monkey was also observed allowing pellets to accumulate and consuming them during and after trials of all response/outcome categories (i.e., whether correct, incorrect, or escaped). This study thus bolsters previous findings that rhesus monkey behaviour in metacognition tasks is in some respects disassociated from mere food delivery/consumption, or even the avoidance of punishment. These and other observations fit well with the evolutionary status and natural proclivities of rhesus monkeys, but weaken arguments that responses in such tests are solely associated with associative mechanisms, and instead suggest more derived and controlled cognitive processing. The latter interpretation appears particularly parsimonious given the neurological adaptations of primates, as well as their highly flexible social and ecological behaviour.
元认知,即对自身心理状态的监测,是人类智力的一个基本方面。尽管对非人类动物的测试表明存在不确定性监测,但一些作者仅从原始心理机制和强化机制的角度来解释这些结果,其中“强化”总是被认为是获得食物奖励的给予和消耗。令人惊讶的是,很少有研究详细描述参与此类任务的动物的逐次试验行为。在这里,我们报告了基于行为学的观察结果,观察对象是一只恒河猴,它完成了稀疏-密集辨别问题,并且可以选择自行逃避试验(即做出“不确定”反应)。不确定性反应通常在客观难度较高的试验中做出,其特征是在开始可见试验前延迟时间长、做出反应所需时间长,而且即使在控制了难度之后,反应过程中的波动程度也很高。在客观难度较高的试验中,错误反应也很常见,但其特征是波动程度低。这表明“犹豫”可能具有适应性,这与那些认为或预测每当出现具有挑战性的问题时就会有隐含的、不灵活的信息寻求或“替代选项”行为的模型不一致。与那些认为元认知任务中的非人类行为仅由食物给予/消耗驱动的混淆模型不同,我们还观察到这只猴子允许颗粒在所有反应/结果类别(即正确、错误或逃避)的试验期间及之后积累并食用它们。因此,这项研究支持了先前的发现,即恒河猴在元认知任务中的行为在某些方面与单纯的食物给予/消耗甚至避免惩罚无关。这些以及其他观察结果与恒河猴的进化地位和自然倾向非常吻合,但削弱了认为此类测试中的反应仅与联想机制相关的观点,相反,这表明存在更高级和受控制的认知加工。考虑到灵长类动物的神经适应性以及它们高度灵活的社会和生态行为,后一种解释显得尤为简洁。