Centre for Biological Diversity, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9TH, UK.
Department of Biological Sciences, AWESB, University of Lethbridge, 4401 University Drive, Lethbridge, Alberta T1K 3M4, Canada.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Nov 4;379(1913):20230403. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0403. Epub 2024 Sep 16.
The best-known example of episodic memory in animals came from food-storing birds. One of the beauties of the food-storing system was that inherent in the behaviour were the elements that (at the time) made up episodic memory: what, where and when. While there were then already plenty of data on animals' ability to put together what and where, the addition of the time element in animals' memory and its testing was one that was both new and experimentally challenging. It has, however, led to an increasing variety of examples showing that animals can put together all three informational components. If episodic memories can be described as those memories that make any one of us who we are, why should non-human animals have such memories? Here, we argue that episodic memories play a significant functional role in the lives of real animals, in particular, enabling them to make decisions about how they might or should act in their future. We support our argument with data from a range of examples, focussing on data from the field.This article is part of the theme issue 'Elements of episodic memory: lessons from 40 years of research'.
动物情景记忆的最著名例子来自于食性贮藏动物。食性贮藏行为有三个要素(即什么、哪里和何时),这使它成为了情景记忆的典型代表。当时,虽然已经有大量关于动物整合“什么”和“哪里”的能力的数据,但在动物记忆中加入“时间”元素并对其进行测试是一个全新的、具有实验挑战性的课题。然而,这导致了越来越多的例子表明,动物可以将所有三个信息组成部分结合起来。如果情景记忆可以被描述为使我们每个人成为自己的记忆,那么为什么非人类动物也会有这样的记忆呢?在这里,我们认为情景记忆在真实动物的生活中起着重要的功能作用,特别是使它们能够就自己未来的行为做出决策。我们通过一系列例子的数据来支持我们的论点,重点是来自该领域的数据。本文是主题为“情景记忆的要素:40 年研究的经验教训”的一部分。