Ostojić Ljerka, Legg Edward W, Dits Arne, Williams Natalie, Brecht Katharina F, Mendl Michael, Clayton Nicola S
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge.
Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam.
J Comp Psychol. 2016 Nov;130(4):407-410. doi: 10.1037/com0000043. Epub 2016 Oct 6.
Male Eurasian jays have been found to adjust the type of food they share with their female partner after seeing her eat 1 type of food to satiety. One interpretation of this behavior is that the male encoded the female's decreased desire for the food she was sated on, and adjusted his behavior accordingly. However, in these studies, the male's actions were scored by experimenters who knew on which food the female was sated. Thus, it is possible that the experimenters' expectations (subconsciously) affected their behavior during tests that, in turn, inadvertently could have influenced the males' actions. Here, we repeated the original test with an experimenter who was blind to the food on which the female was sated. This procedure yielded the same results as the original studies: The male shared food with the female that was in line with her current desire. Thus, our results rule out the possibility that the Eurasian jay males' actions in the food sharing task could be explained by the effects of an experimenter expectancy bias. (PsycINFO Database Record
研究发现,雄性欧亚松鸦在看到雌性伴侣吃到某种食物饱腹后,会调整与她分享的食物类型。对这种行为的一种解释是,雄性记住了雌性对已饱腹食物的欲望降低,并相应地调整了自己的行为。然而,在这些研究中,雄性的行为是由知道雌性饱腹于哪种食物的实验者进行评分的。因此,有可能实验者的期望(潜意识地)在测试过程中影响了他们的行为,进而无意中影响了雄性的行为。在此,我们让一位对雌性饱腹于哪种食物不知情的实验者重复了原始测试。这一过程产生了与原始研究相同的结果:雄性与雌性分享的食物符合她当前的喜好。因此,我们的结果排除了欧亚松鸦雄性在食物分享任务中的行为可能由实验者期望偏差效应来解释的可能性。(《心理学文摘数据库记录》 )