Department of Cognitive Science, Central European University, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Life Sciences, University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy.
Elife. 2022 Apr 11;11:e67208. doi: 10.7554/eLife.67208.
Absence is a notion that is usually captured by language-related concepts like zero or negation. Whether nonlinguistic creatures encode similar thoughts is an open question, as everyday behavior marked by absence (of food, of social partners) can be explained solely by expecting presence somewhere else. We investigated 8-day-old chicks' looking behavior in response to events violating expectations about the presence or absence of an object. We found different behavioral responses to violations of presence and absence, suggesting distinct underlying mechanisms. Importantly, chicks displayed an avian signature of novelty detection to violations of absence, namely a sex-dependent left-eye-bias. Follow-up experiments excluded accounts that would explain this bias by perceptual mismatch or by representing the object at different locations. These results suggest that the ability to spontaneously form representations about the absence of objects likely belongs to the initial cognitive repertoire of vertebrate species.
缺席通常是通过语言相关的概念来捕捉的,比如零或否定。非语言生物是否编码类似的思想是一个悬而未决的问题,因为日常生活中以缺席为标志的行为(食物、社会伙伴的缺席)可以仅仅通过在其他地方期待存在来解释。我们研究了 8 天大的小鸡对违反对物体存在或缺失的预期的事件的注视行为。我们发现对存在和缺失的违反有不同的行为反应,这表明存在不同的潜在机制。重要的是,小鸡对违反缺失表现出鸟类特有的新奇检测,即与性别有关的左眼偏向。后续实验排除了通过感知不匹配或在不同位置表示物体来解释这种偏差的解释。这些结果表明,自发形成关于物体缺失的表象的能力可能属于脊椎动物物种初始认知能力的一部分。