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Studying Cognition in Animals

Studying Cognition in Animals. Cognition. Cognition : study of the internal states and processes that produce behavior. Consciousness : something else entirely. . Intentionality.

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Studying Cognition in Animals

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  1. Studying Cognition in Animals

  2. Cognition • Cognition: study of the internal states and processes that produce behavior. • Consciousness: something else entirely.

  3. Intentionality • “I’ll pick up the kids from school today”, says Max leaving for work. We’d normally say that Max’s statement conveys an intention. We can predict that he will drive from his office to the school by a certain route at a certain time and that he will change his behavior if the circumstances change. • A philosopher might say that Max exhibits intentionality.

  4. Intentionality II • Intentionality in the philosophical sense is the property of being “about something”. • It is the defining property of mental states. • Beliefs, desires, plans, understandings, as well as intentions, are examples of intentional states. • So, a belief has to be about something.

  5. Hierarchy of Intentionality • Zero-Order Intentionality: an animal that does not have beliefs, desires, or any intentional state, is exhibiting zero-order intentionality. • First Order: an animal with beliefs and desires about the real world or the behavior of others is a first-order intentional system. • Second Order: When an animal’s mental states concern the mental states of others.

  6. Thus, if Max plans to arrive at the school on time, he is exhibiting first-order intentionality. • If he believes the children knowhe is coming, he is exhibiting second-order intentionality. • If he wants them to believe that he expects them to be waiting, then he is exhibiting third-order intentionality.

  7. Practical question: • How do you measure this in an animal? • A hallmark of intention is that flexible behavior is used to achieve a goal.

  8. Broken-wing display in plovers • E.g., Ristau’s work • First order: plover plans to lead the fox away from the nest • Second order: plover wants the fox to think she is easy prey or has no nest

  9. Evidence from plovers • Flexible behavior: In 87% of staged encounters with a human, plovers moved in a direction that was away from the nest. • Knowledge of other: plovers moved further away for “dangerous” intruders than “nonthreatening” intruders • Should monitor intruder: starts display when intruder can see it, if the intruder stops following, plover intensifies display, and approaches intruder. • But can more hard-wired behaviors (ethological approach) explain these changes in behavior? • Sign stimuli and vectors? Eye direction? • Series of if/then statements based on combinations of sign stimuli?

  10. Morgan’s Canon:Accept the lowest level of intentional explanation that works • From the point of view of natural selection, what matters is that the animal achieves goals such as finding food, mates, and safety. • Using Morgan’s canon to choose among alternatives assumes that natural selection has always produced the lowest level intentional system that can do the job. • Do you all agree with this?

  11. Why is this relevant? • Functional concerns of behavioral ecology and ethology often lead to mechanistic questions -- which are the realm of cognition. • Cognitive ethologists are frequently concerned with the diversity of solutions that living organisms have found for common problems. • They also emphasize broad taxonomic comparisons and do not focus on a few select representatives of limited taxa (we hope).

  12. Darwin • Cognitive ethology can trace its beginnings to the writings of Charles Darwinan • and some of his contemporaries and disciples.

  13. The Expression of Emotion in Animals and Man (Darwin, 1872) • Argument against The anatomy and physiology of expression, by Bell, • Bell claimed that humans were unique in their capacity for expressing their feelings through facial muscles. • Darwin refutes the old natural-theological position, • through argument • and expensive foldout heliotype illustrations!

  14. Cognitive Ethology(Griffin, 1976) • The Question of Animal Awareness: Evolutionary Continuity of Mental Experience (Donald R. Griffin, 1976). • Concentrates on the evolution and evolutionary continuity of animal cognition

  15. Griffin wanted to come to terms with the difficult question of "what is it like to be a particular animal?"

  16. Griffin’s approach • Mental images • Intentionality • Language • Communication • Behavior is plastic, modifiable, and planning seems to be evident. • Example: Bees communicate symbolically with meaning (depends on map, who is ‘listening’, etc).

  17. Summary of Critiques • Problem: it is suggestive but not indicative • one cannot make unobservable mental experience the heart of a field • few theories with testable predictions • ignores methods of cognitive science because they are too “restrictive”. • Speaks of mental experiences of animals (“knowing that they think”). • Concludes it must be cognition when it’s actually metacognition.

  18. Solutions... • Instead ask: how is information acquired, processed, and used? • not “does it exist?” (mental experience). • make mental events, not experiences, the heart of the field. • You don’t have to experience the events for them to be real and cognitive (the experience is metacognition). • Gives researchers something about which they can make predictions and measure.

  19. Information-processing method • Cognition: internal states and processes that produce behavior. • This is tough: those states and processes are not directly measurable. States and Processes Stimulus Response

  20. Do we need physicality of structures to account for empirical phenomena at a behavioral level? • No, not if one uses strong inference.

  21. Problem #2 • Natural selection acts on outcomes (not mechanisms). • You can have > 1 mechanism and the same outcome or • …>1 outcome with the same mechanism. • You need to constrain the question. How? • Ecology! Spatial Memory in Corvids

  22. Ecological Approach to Cognition • Assume: function constrains mechanism. • Correspondence between mechanism and function may not be neat. • Studying ecology should give us clues. Cognitive Structures Environment Behavior to predict Transformed by... How is info here…

  23. Behavioral ecology can inform questions of cognition • Optimal Foraging Theory: maximize rate of energy intake and fitness. • Example: Woodpecker takes longer on some trees than on others when foraging. • Assume: adaptive, optimal, maximizing energy, maximizing fitness. • Function: avoid depleted food, avoid predation, stay close to nest. • Mechanism: how know depleted, what info tells bird to change behavior, how does it know where its nest is? • Measure: distances between trees, prey repletion rates, prey energy, etc.

  24. Ex) Kinds of Memory • Reference: Information that is procedural and long term. • How to dial phone • Working: event specific and short term. • What number to dial.

  25. Animal patrolling a territory • Reference Memory: Domain of territory and how to patrol • Working Memory: relevant events of last patrol (intruders and ripening of food). • Amakihi anecdote and study… • …avoids mist net and drives intruder into it. • spatial memory?

  26. Learning and Foraging • Much of what goes on in foraging (MVT, OFT, etc) implies learning and memory • Operant conditioning even! • Amakihi: Always visits renewed nectaries in flowers on territory (maximizes energy intake). • Mechanism: Must remember • 1) where flowers are • 2) the last time visited • Measure: levels of nectar, time between visits, energy intake rate, spatial efficiency.

  27. But do this randomly so an intruder can’t figure it out! ??

  28. Food Storing Behavior • You create a resource distribution only you know. • Reference Memory: storage sites, what is in the site, territory • Working Memory: which site did I empty today? • Information: spatial layout, site contents, etc.

  29. Spatial Memory: Corvids Behavior Ecology Cog. Struct Mechanism 1) Storage place 2) Food type 1) Where is food? 2) What food is it? Offers a unique opportunity to use the comparative approach…another dimension to add.

  30. The Synthetic Approach to the Study of Animal Cognition • 3 Major Aspects • 1) Broad definition of the phenomena of interest • 2) Assume and use comparative evolutionary origins • 3) Emphasis on the importance of studying learning in the laboratory and in the field • Multiprocedural (to deal with L/P distinction) • Internal and External Validity

  31. Broad Definition • Intelligence: Processes by which animals obtain and retain information about their environment and use that information to make behavioral decisions. • Cognitive AND adaptive • Integrates nature and nurture • NOT general

  32. Comparative Evolutionary Approach • Anagenesis: linear ranking of species or a trait. • No, no, no…. • Please read Hodos and Campbell every year (1969) • Note: both quantitative and qualitative differences are of interest.

  33. Laboratory and Field • If intelligence serves an adaptive function, one must look at environmental constraints. Cognitive Structures Behavior to predict Transformed by... Environmental Info

  34. Laboratory/Field Studies • important for two reasons • 1) External Validity: if questions from the laboratory work in the field= RIGOR • 2) Theoretical Reasons: you’re looking at how behavior affects biological success, you must look at this in the field.

  35. Biological Approach II • Assumes there MUST be significant variation in animal intelligence • Feather analogy: feathers are so successful birds have never lost them. But they are not so successful that there is no variation at all. • Same goes for learning! • Traits with adaptive function will therefore vary between species.

  36. Field Studies • Learning is more difficult to observe than learned behaviors. • Seed caching birds (contents of caches) • Bees • Vervets • Foraging models (animals learn energy and handling time and rank items).

  37. Research Strategies • Develop natural history of animal intelligence • foraging • social behavior • learning • Use natural history to choose species and design procedures • Field: Is there a gradient in a behavior in a set of species? • Ecological validity in lab: how does the task meet a requirement of an equivalent problem faced in nature • ex) Blue Jays and cryptic prey

  38. Research Strategies II • learning/performance distinction versus true species differences • Multiprocedural Approach: you cannot eliminate all variables, so change the context but keep the question the same (remember Glen Hass’s experiments from last week) • Have external criteria to make predictions about species differences • This is better than a null hypothesis of NO differences • If all predictions are supported in all tests, this argues against contextual variables. • Base it on natural history

  39. Generate multiple predictions about species differences (Strong Inference, Platt) • Divergences: differences in a cognitive trait between closely related species due to ecology. • Correlations: similarities in a cognitive trait due to similar ecology. • E.g., Spatial memory and amakihis. Compare them to a close relative with different feeding habits or to a nectar feeding bat….better yet….

  40. Really do a comparative study • You need at least 3 comparisons (2 closely related, and an out-group of some sort) • Control for phylogeny AND ecology • No cat, rat, chicken, and man comparisons!

  41. So: • Set up External Criteria • Generate Multiple Predictions • Use Multiprocedural Approach • Several procedures that measure the same cognitive process • Test the 3 species with all the procedures • Choose species based on external criterion from their natural history • Make predictions in advance • If the same order of species results from each different experiment, the contextual variables are unlikely to be responsible

  42. So, part II: • 1) Broadly define learning, intelligence, and cognition • 2) Place learning, intelligence, and cognition in an evolutionary context • 3) Use behavioral ecology as a basis to study learning, etc. • 4) Use the comparative approach: • Your hypotheses should allow you to make multiple and detailed predictions • Natural history should help you generate your multiple hypotheses • Multiprocedural approach

  43. Example: Food storing in corvids • Gradient in Natural History • Gradient in Morphology • Gradient in reliance of food stores • Gradient in food-storing behavior Mexican Scrub Pinyon Nutcracker

  44. Based on Ecology: spatial • Predict: species differences in spatial memory capabilities: mexican<scrub<pinyon<nutcracker • Multiprocedural Approach • Radial Maze • Food store and recovery (long term, short term) • Operant tests of short-term spatial memory • Differences in hippocampal volume • Species differences hold up in all tests, no matter the context.

  45. Sociality • It has been suggested that the cognitive demands of social living may be an important force driving the evolution of intelligence. • Kamil and colleagues have been testing this hypothesis by comparing highly-social pinyon jays (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus) with their less social close relative, the western scrub jay (Aphelocoma callifornicus). • Tests such as observational learning (Templeton, Kamil & Balda, 1999) and transitive inference (Bond, Kamil & Balda 2002) have been used.

  46. Based on ecology:sociality • Reference, nonspatial task • Predictions: scrub<<pinyon • Results support predictions. • Now test against nonsocial Nutcracker Scrub Pinyon

  47. Spatial Cognition • On the small scale, Kamil and Jones were interested in how Clark's nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana) relocate their seed caches. • On a larger scale, they were interested in nutcrackers' ability to learn geometric relationships (Kamil & Jones, 1997, 2000) and how nutcrackers recognize locations where food has been stored (Kamil & Cheng, 2001).

  48. Can the animal detect the information required to construct a representation (e.g., geometric relations between objects)? • Clark’s Nutcrackers: Birds use general principle (relationship between landmarks, not between a goal and the landmarks) to find a goal located between two landmarks. 2) Goal 1)

  49. Two Landmarks

  50. Clark's nutcrackers can learn to find the point halfway between two landmarks that vary in the distance that separates them. • A general principle, as the birds correctly find the halfway point when the landmarks are presented with new distances between them. • The ability to find a point defined not by the relationship between a goal and a landmark • but by the relationship between landmarks. • Two distinct processes: • direction: the use of directional bearings to find the (hypothetical) line connecting the landmarks and • distance: finding the correct place along that line.

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