Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour, Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7RB, UK.
School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9TH, UK
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Sep 26;373(1756). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0282.
In the past decade, several conceptual papers have linked variation in animal personality to variation in cognition, and recent years have seen a flood of empirical studies testing this link. However, these results have not been synthesized in a quantitative way. Here, we systematically search the literature and conduct a phylogenetically controlled meta-analysis of empirical papers that have tested the relationship between animal personality (exploration, boldness, activity, aggression and sociability) and cognition (initial learning/reversal speed, number of correct choices/errors after standard training). We find evidence for a small but significant relationship between variation in personality and variation in learning across species in the absolute scale; however, the of this relationship is highly variable and when both positive and negative effect sizes are considered, the average effect size does not differ significantly from zero. Importantly, this variation among studies is not explained by differences in personality or learning measure, or taxonomic grouping. Further, these results do not support current hypotheses suggesting that that fast-explorers are fast-learners or that slow-explorers perform better on tests of reversal learning. Rather, we find evidence that bold animals are faster learners, but only when boldness is measured in response to a predator (or simulated predator) and not when boldness is measured by exposure to a novel object (or novel food). Further, although only a small sub-sample of papers reported results separately for males and females, sex explained a significant amount of variation in effect size. These results, therefore, suggest that, while personality and learning are indeed related across a range of species, the direction of this relationship is highly variable. Thus further empirical work is needed to determine whether there are important moderators of this relationship.This article is part of the theme issue 'Causes and consequences of individual differences in cognitive abilities'.
在过去的十年中,有几篇概念性论文将动物个性的变化与认知的变化联系起来,近年来,已有大量的实证研究检验了这种联系。然而,这些结果并没有以定量的方式进行综合。在这里,我们系统地搜索文献,并对已经测试动物个性(探索、大胆、活跃、攻击和社交性)与认知(初始学习/反转速度、标准训练后的正确选择/错误数量)之间关系的实证论文进行了系统的综述和基于系统发育的荟萃分析。我们发现,在绝对尺度上,物种间个性和学习变化之间存在着小但显著的关系;然而,这种关系的 变化很大,当同时考虑正效应和负效应大小时,平均效应大小与零没有显著差异。重要的是,这种研究之间的差异不能用个性或学习测量的差异或分类群来解释。此外,这些结果不支持当前的假设,即快速探索者是快速学习者,或者缓慢探索者在反转学习测试中表现更好。相反,我们发现有证据表明大胆的动物是更快的学习者,但只有当大胆是对捕食者(或模拟捕食者)的反应时,而不是当大胆是通过暴露于新物体(或新食物)来测量时。此外,尽管只有一小部分论文分别报告了雄性和雌性的结果,但性别确实解释了效应大小变化的很大一部分。因此,这些结果表明,尽管个性和学习在一系列物种中确实存在关联,但这种关系的方向变化很大。因此,需要进一步的实证工作来确定这种关系是否存在重要的调节因素。本文是主题为“认知能力个体差异的原因和后果”的一部分。