Laboratory of Animal Sociology, Department of Biology and Geosciences, Graduate School of Science, Osaka City University, Osaka 558-8585, Japan.
Laboratory of Animal Sociology, Department of Biology, Graduate School of Science, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 558-8585, Japan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Feb 14;120(7):e2208420120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2208420120. Epub 2023 Feb 6.
Some animals have the remarkable capacity for mirror self-recognition (MSR), yet any implications for self-awareness remain uncertain and controversial. This is largely because explicit tests of the two potential mechanisms underlying MSR are still lacking: mental image of the self and kinesthetic visual matching. Here, we test the hypothesis that MSR ability in cleaner fish, , is associated with a mental image of the self, in particular the self-face, like in humans Mirror-naive fish initially attacked photograph models of both themselves and unfamiliar strangers. In contrast, after all fish had passed the mirror mark test, fish did not attack their own (motionless) images, but still frequently attacked those of unfamiliar individuals. When fish were exposed to composite photographs, the self-face/unfamiliar body were not attacked, but photographs of unfamiliar face/self-body were attacked, demonstrating that cleaner fish with MSR capacity recognize their own facial characteristics in photographs. Additionally, when presented with self-photographs with a mark placed on the throat, unmarked mirror-experienced cleaner fish demonstrated throat-scraping behaviors. When combined, our results provide clear evidence that cleaner fish recognize themselves in photographs and that the likely mechanism for MSR is associated with a mental image of the self-face, not a kinesthetic visual-matching model. Humans are also capable of having a mental image of the self-face, which is considered an example of private self-awareness. We demonstrate that combining mirror test experiments with photographs has enormous potential to further our understanding of the evolution of cognitive processes and private self-awareness across nonhuman animals.
一些动物具有显著的镜像自我识别能力(MSR),但自我意识的任何影响仍然不确定和有争议。这主要是因为缺乏对 MSR 潜在机制的明确测试:自我的心理意象和动觉视觉匹配。在这里,我们测试了这样一个假设,即清洁鱼的 MSR 能力与自我的心理意象有关,特别是与人类一样的自我面孔。在镜子测试中,清洁鱼最初会攻击自己和陌生个体的照片模型。相反,在所有鱼都通过了镜子标记测试后,它们不再攻击自己的(静止)图像,但仍经常攻击陌生个体的图像。当鱼暴露在复合照片下时,它们不会攻击自己的脸/陌生的身体的照片,但会攻击陌生的脸/自己的身体的照片,这表明具有 MSR 能力的清洁鱼可以识别出自己的面部特征。此外,当给清洁鱼展示带有标记的自拍照时,有过镜像体验的清洁鱼会表现出刮喉行为。综合来看,我们的结果提供了确凿的证据,表明清洁鱼可以在照片中识别出自己,并且 MSR 的可能机制与自我面孔的心理意象有关,而不是动觉视觉匹配模型。人类也有自我面孔的心理意象,这被认为是私人自我意识的一个例子。我们证明,将镜像测试实验与照片相结合,具有极大的潜力来进一步了解认知过程和非人类动物的私人自我意识的进化。