Friday, April 5, 2013

Chimpanzee Metacognition

Psychological scientist Michael Beran of Georgia State University and colleagues tested metacognition in three language-trained chimpanzees. All three chimpanzees had been trained from an early age to use symbols to request and label objects, actions, locations, and individuals. And they could respond to requests by humans using those symbols.

The researchers placed various treats — such as bananas, M&Ms, apples, peanuts, and raisins — in a container. Then they either titled the container toward or away from the chimpanzee. If the chimpanzees saw a raisin in the container, they could press the symbol for raisin and it would be delivered. But, if the researchers did not show the contents of the container, the chimpanzees would have to make an extra effort to walk to the container to identify the item before going back to answer on the keyboard. Only correct responses were rewarded with the food item.

The data, gathered over many trials, indicated that chimpanzees tended to answer right away when they had seen the treat in the container. But if they hadn’t been shown the food item, they were much more likely to investigate rather than taking a guess on the keyboard.

According to the researchers, these findings suggest that chimps know what they know and what they don’t know. The study provides evidence that chimpanzees have metacognitive abilities that are closely related to those of humans.


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