Animal Intelligence
Cambridge University Press
9780521825047 - Animal Intelligence - From Individual to Social Cognition - by Zhanna Reznikova
Table of Contents
Contents
| Foreword: An ant’s eye view of animal intelligence, by W. C. McGrew | page xiii | |
| Preface | xv | |
| Acknowledgements | xvi | |
| Part I Development of ideas and methods in studying animal intelligence | 1 | |
| Chapter 1 Evolution of views on animal intelligence | 3 | |
| Chapter 2 The dramatic adventures of behaviourism | 11 | |
| 2.1 | Classical behaviourism | 11 |
| 2.2 | The Skinnerian branch of behaviourism | 16 |
| Chapter 3 Intelligence under the scalpel: starts and false starts of neuroscience | 20 | |
| 3.1 | A short history of neurophysiology | 20 |
| 3.2 | Two sides of reflex: Pavlov’s and Sherrington’s branches of reflexology | 23 |
| 3.3 | The puzzle of the memory trace | 24 |
| Chapter 4 Integrative approaches and coherent movement in studying animal intelligence | 28 | |
| 4.1 | Wholes perceive the wholes: the Gestalt approach to perception and learning | 28 |
| 4.2 | A cognitive map of the learning land: from behaviourism to cognitivism via Gestalt theory | 31 |
| 4.3 | ‘Forget about schools’: the development of an integrative approach to the study of animal intelligence | 32 |
| Chapter 5 Ethological approaches for studying animal learning | 34 | |
| Concluding comments | 38 | |
| Part II Animals are welcomed to the class: learning classes | 39 | |
| Chapter 6 Habituation and associative learning | 41 | |
| 6.1 | Habituation | 41 |
| 6.2 | Associative learning | 42 |
| 6.3 | Common basis for different forms of associative learning | 54 |
| Chapter 7 Learning classes beyond ‘simple’ associative learning | 64 | |
| 7.1 | Rules of ‘simple’ associative learning | 64 |
| 7.2 | Latent (exploratory) learning | 66 |
| 7.3 | Insight | 67 |
| 7.4 | Imprinting | 68 |
| Concluding comments | 69 | |
| Part III Past and future in animal life: remembering, updating and anticipation | 71 | |
| Chapter 8 What is memory for an intelligent animal? | 73 | |
| 8.1 | Kinds of memory | 73 |
| 8.2 | Different bodies, different memories | 77 |
| Chapter 9 Chicks do not suffer from schizophrenia: a brief outline of brain mechanisms for processing and storing memory | 84 | |
| 9.1 | Searching for the spatial localisation of memory | 84 |
| 9.2 | Becoming memories: consolidation | 87 |
| Chapter 10 Behavioural mechanisms of the experience of time | 89 | |
| 10.1 | Travel into the past: delayed response behaviour | 89 |
| 10.2 | Travel into the future: anticipatory coding and prediction | 93 |
| 10.3 | Foraging as soon as possible: impulsiveness and self-control in animals | 95 |
| Concluding comments | 101 | |
| Part IV Being in the right place at the right time: representation of space and objects in the animal mind | 103 | |
| Chapter 11 Navigation strategies in animals | 105 | |
| 11.1 | Display of navigation in animals | 105 |
| 11.2 | Ways of navigation in animals | 107 |
| 11.3 | Redundant sources of spatial information in animals | 111 |
| 11.4 | Mapping in the context of natural histories | 114 |
| Chapter 12 To what degree is mapping cognitive in animals? | 118 | |
| 12.1 | Cognitive mapping as a methodological problem | 118 |
| 12.2 | Adjusting the track to the goal: short cuts and detours as elements of cognitive mapping in animals | 121 |
| 12.3 | Is a treasure map cognitive? Just ask a wild explorer to inform conspecifics | 128 |
| Chapter 13 ‘Object permanence’ in animals | 132 | |
| 13.1 | Experimental paradigin to study object permanence | 132 |
| 13.2 | Walnut-sized brains master object permanence tasks: insights from grey parrots | 134 |
| 13.3 | Comparative studies of object permanence | 135 |
| Concluding comments | 139 | |
| Part V Experimental approaches to studying essential activities of animal intelligence | 141 | |
| Chapter 14 Conditional discrimination as a basic technique for studying rule learning | 145 | |
| 14.1 | Experimental paradigm of discrimination learning | 145 |
| 14.2 | Discrimination and reversal shift | 148 |
| 14.3 | Conditional discrimination and rule learning | 149 |
| Chapter 15 Categorisation, abstraction and concept formation: are animals logical? | 152 | |
| 15.1 | Acquisition of the same/different concept in animals | 152 |
| 15.2 | Categorisation in animals | 154 |
| 15.3 | Abstraction in animals | 158 |
| 15.4 | Animals’ natural concepts: classification at different levels of abstraction | 160 |
| 15.5 | Mental representation (imagery) | 163 |
| Chapter 16 Conceptual behaviour based on relations | 167 | |
| 16.1 | Cross-modal transfer in discrimination tasks | 167 |
| 16.2 | Ordering and serial learning | 168 |
| 16.3 | Transitive inference | 170 |
| 16.4 | Relational matching-to-sample | 171 |
| Concluding comments | 173 | |
| Part VI Advanced intelligence in animals: rule extraction, tool-using and number-related skills | 175 | |
| Chapter 17 Insightful behaviour | 177 | |
| 17.1 | What is insight? | 177 |
| 17.2 | Learning how to learn: learning sets | 181 |
| 17.3 | Latent learning and exploration | 182 |
| Chapter 18 Tool-using as a tool for experimental studies of animal intelligence | 186 | |
| 18.1 | Brief account of tool behaviour in animals | 186 |
| 18.2 | Experimental studies on tool use and cognitive abilities in animals | 191 |
| Chapter 19 Numerical competence in animals | 210 | |
| 19.1 | Criteria of numerical competence for comparative studies | 210 |
| 19.2 | Experimental approaches to studying numerical competence in animals | 212 |
| 19.3 | Numerosity discrimination and estimation in animals | 214 |
| 19.4 | Counting animals | 217 |
| 19.5 | Animals use symbolic representation of numbers | 223 |
| 19.6 | Wild arithmetic: an insight from comparative studies | 223 |
| Concluding comments | 229 | |
| Part VII Knowledge is power but not for all: species-specific intelligence | 231 | |
| Chapter 20 Is finding a common metric of intelligence possible in real animal life? | 233 | |
| 20.1 | Never laugh at fishes: some species and members of species are more intelligent than others | 233 |
| 20.2 | ‘Misbehaviour of organisms’: learned behaviour drifts toward instinctive behaviour | 236 |
| Chapter 21 An outline of instinctive behaviour | 240 | |
| 21.1 | Displays of complex instinctive behaviour | 240 |
| 21.2 | Room for intelligence in the context of selective perception and specific responses | 243 |
| Chapter 22 Guided learning and cognitive specialisation | 250 | |
| 22.1 | Learning preparedness: some associations can be built more readily than others | 250 |
| 22.2 | Is it easy to distinguish between instinctive and learned behaviour? | 254 |
| 22.3 | A harsh environment for pluralism in animal societies: behavioural specialisation within populations | 256 |
| Chapter 23 Developmental studies of animal intelligence: role of innate and acquired behaviour | 267 | |
| 23.1 | How an instinct is learned: early experience | 267 |
| 23.2 | How intelligence is wired: innate complex patterns or acquired coordinations? | 272 |
| Chapter 24 Imprinting | 279 | |
| Concluding comments | 286 | |
| Part VIII Wisdom through social learning | 287 | |
| Chapter 25 Ecological and cognitive aspects of social learning | 289 | |
| 25.1 | Different forms of social learning: brief description and definitions | 289 |
| 25.2 | Ecological aspects of social learning | 292 |
| 25.3 | Cognitive aspects of social learning | 296 |
| Chapter 26 The spread of innovation within populations | 303 | |
| 26.1 | The ways in which behavioural traditions spread | 303 |
| 26.2 | Possible mechanisms of establishing new customs in populations | 306 |
| 26.3 | What it is to be an innovator | 307 |
| 26.4 | Can animals teach? | 309 |
| Chapter 27 Culture in animal societies | 313 | |
| 27.1 | Empirical approaches for studying animal culture | 314 |
| 27.2 | ‘Crucibles of culture’ in animal societies | 314 |
| 27.3 | Dialects as cultural traits | 317 |
| Concluding comments | 319 | |
| Part IX Intelligent communication | 321 | |
| Chapter 28 Can animals exchange meaningful messages? | 323 | |
| Chapter 29 Communication, speech and language: what falls to the share of non-humans? | 325 | |
| 29.1 | Communication | 325 |
| 29.2 | Speech | 325 |
| 29.3 | Language | 327 |
| Chapter 30 Direct dialogue with animals: language-training experiments | 330 | |
| 30.1 | ‘Token language’ | 330 |
| 30.2 | The use of intermediary gesture languages to speak with primates | 331 |
| 30.3 | The use of alternative artificial languages to communicate with apes | 334 |
| 30.4 | English serves as an intermediary language: studies with parrots | 337 |
| 30.5 | Dialogue with marine mammals … and with at least one dog | 339 |
| Chapter 31 A battle for the Rosetta Stone: attempts to decipher animals’ signals | 342 | |
| 31.1 | The dance language of honeybees | 343 |
| 31.2 | Semantic vocalisations in animals: words without a language? | 346 |
| Chapter 32 A dialogue with a black box: using ideas and methods of information theory for studying animal communication | 351 | |
| 32.1 | Ants on the binary tree | 352 |
| 32.2 | Evaluation of ants’ ‘language’ | 355 |
| Concluding comments | 358 | |
| Part X Social life and social intelligence in the wild | 361 | |
| Chapter 33 Diversity of social systems in animals | 363 | |
| 33.1 | Anonymity versus individual recognition in animal communities | 364 |
| 33.2 | Levels of sociality in animal communities | 369 |
| Chapter 34 If one must be sacrificed, why me? Evolutionary and behavioural aspects of altruism in animals | 372 | |
| Chapter 35 Intelligence in the context of the functional structure of animal communities | 377 | |
| 35.1 | Caste division and polyethism in eusocial communities | 377 |
| 35.2 | Cooperative (communal) breeding: helpers sacrifice their intelligence for breeders | 385 |
| 35.3 | Working in teams: wild professional profiles | 390 |
| Chapter 36 What sort of intelligence is required to navigate social landscapes? | 393 | |
| 36.1 | Hierarchies and roles | 393 |
| 36.2 | Social intelligence in animals | 396 |
| Chapter 37 Theory of Mind | 399 | |
| 37.1 | Perspective-taking | 400 |
| 37.2 | Deceptive tactics | 402 |
| 37.3 | Knowledge attribution | 403 |
| 37.4 | Self-awareness | 407 |
| Concluding comments | 411 | |
| References | 412 | |
| Index | 462 | |
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