Cambridge Catalogue  
  • Help
Home > Catalogue > Animal Intelligence
Animal Intelligence

Resources and solutions

This title has free online support material available.

Details

  • 123 b/w illus.
  • Page extent: 488 pages
  • Size: 246 x 189 mm
  • Weight: 1.04 kg

Paperback

 (ISBN-13: 9780521532020)

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. McGrewpage xiii
Prefacexv
Acknowledgementsxvi
Part I  Development of ideas and methods in studying animal intelligence1
Chapter 1  Evolution of views on animal intelligence3
Chapter 2  The dramatic adventures of behaviourism11
2.1Classical behaviourism11
2.2The Skinnerian branch of behaviourism16
Chapter 3  Intelligence under the scalpel: starts and false starts of neuroscience20
3.1A short history of neurophysiology20
3.2Two sides of reflex: Pavlov’s and Sherrington’s branches of reflexology23
3.3The puzzle of the memory trace24
Chapter 4  Integrative approaches and coherent movement in studying animal intelligence28
4.1Wholes perceive the wholes: the Gestalt approach to perception and learning28
4.2A cognitive map of the learning land: from behaviourism to cognitivism via Gestalt theory31
4.3‘Forget about schools’: the development of an integrative approach to the study of animal intelligence32
Chapter 5  Ethological approaches for studying animal learning34
Concluding comments38
Part II  Animals are welcomed to the class: learning classes39
Chapter 6  Habituation and associative learning41
6.1Habituation41
6.2Associative learning42
6.3Common basis for different forms of associative learning54
Chapter 7  Learning classes beyond ‘simple’ associative learning64
7.1Rules of ‘simple’ associative learning64
7.2Latent (exploratory) learning66
7.3Insight67
7.4Imprinting68
Concluding comments69
Part III  Past and future in animal life: remembering, updating and anticipation71
Chapter 8  What is memory for an intelligent animal?73
8.1Kinds of memory73
8.2Different bodies, different memories77
Chapter 9  Chicks do not suffer from schizophrenia: a brief outline of brain mechanisms for processing and storing memory84
9.1Searching for the spatial localisation of memory84
9.2Becoming memories: consolidation87
Chapter 10  Behavioural mechanisms of the experience of time89
10.1Travel into the past: delayed response behaviour89
10.2Travel into the future: anticipatory coding and prediction93
10.3Foraging as soon as possible: impulsiveness and self-control in animals95
Concluding comments101
Part IV  Being in the right place at the right time: representation of space and objects in the animal mind103
Chapter 11  Navigation strategies in animals105
11.1Display of navigation in animals105
11.2Ways of navigation in animals107
11.3Redundant sources of spatial information in animals111
11.4Mapping in the context of natural histories114
Chapter 12  To what degree is mapping cognitive in animals?118
12.1Cognitive mapping as a methodological problem118
12.2Adjusting the track to the goal: short cuts and detours as elements of cognitive mapping in animals121
12.3Is a treasure map cognitive? Just ask a wild explorer to inform conspecifics128
Chapter 13  ‘Object permanence’ in animals132
13.1Experimental paradigin to study object permanence132
13.2Walnut-sized brains master object permanence tasks: insights from grey parrots134
13.3Comparative studies of object permanence135
Concluding comments139
Part V  Experimental approaches to studying essential activities of animal intelligence141
Chapter 14  Conditional discrimination as a basic technique for studying rule learning145
14.1Experimental paradigm of discrimination learning145
14.2Discrimination and reversal shift148
14.3Conditional discrimination and rule learning149
Chapter 15  Categorisation, abstraction and concept formation: are animals logical?152
15.1Acquisition of the same/different concept in animals152
15.2Categorisation in animals154
15.3Abstraction in animals158
15.4Animals’ natural concepts: classification at different levels of abstraction160
15.5Mental representation (imagery)163
Chapter 16  Conceptual behaviour based on relations167
16.1Cross-modal transfer in discrimination tasks167
16.2Ordering and serial learning168
16.3Transitive inference170
16.4Relational matching-to-sample171
Concluding comments173
Part VI  Advanced intelligence in animals: rule extraction, tool-using and number-related skills175
Chapter 17  Insightful behaviour177
17.1What is insight?177
17.2Learning how to learn: learning sets181
17.3Latent learning and exploration182
Chapter 18  Tool-using as a tool for experimental studies of animal intelligence186
18.1Brief account of tool behaviour in animals186
18.2Experimental studies on tool use and cognitive abilities in animals191
Chapter 19  Numerical competence in animals210
19.1Criteria of numerical competence for comparative studies210
19.2Experimental approaches to studying numerical competence in animals212
19.3Numerosity discrimination and estimation in animals214
19.4Counting animals217
19.5Animals use symbolic representation of numbers223
19.6Wild arithmetic: an insight from comparative studies223
Concluding comments229
Part VII  Knowledge is power but not for all: species-specific intelligence231
Chapter 20  Is finding a common metric of intelligence possible in real animal life?233
20.1Never laugh at fishes: some species and members of species are more intelligent than others233
20.2‘Misbehaviour of organisms’: learned behaviour drifts toward instinctive behaviour236
Chapter 21  An outline of instinctive behaviour240
21.1Displays of complex instinctive behaviour240
21.2Room for intelligence in the context of selective perception and specific responses243
Chapter 22  Guided learning and cognitive specialisation250
22.1Learning preparedness: some associations can be built more readily than others250
22.2Is it easy to distinguish between instinctive and learned behaviour?254
22.3A harsh environment for pluralism in animal societies: behavioural specialisation within populations256
Chapter 23  Developmental studies of animal intelligence: role of innate and acquired behaviour267
23.1How an instinct is learned: early experience267
23.2How intelligence is wired: innate complex patterns or acquired coordinations?272
Chapter 24  Imprinting279
Concluding comments286
Part VIII  Wisdom through social learning287
Chapter 25  Ecological and cognitive aspects of social learning289
25.1Different forms of social learning: brief description and definitions289
25.2Ecological aspects of social learning292
25.3Cognitive aspects of social learning296
Chapter 26  The spread of innovation within populations303
26.1The ways in which behavioural traditions spread303
26.2Possible mechanisms of establishing new customs in populations306
26.3What it is to be an innovator307
26.4Can animals teach?309
Chapter 27  Culture in animal societies313
27.1Empirical approaches for studying animal culture314
27.2‘Crucibles of culture’ in animal societies314
27.3Dialects as cultural traits317
Concluding comments319
Part IX  Intelligent communication321
Chapter 28  Can animals exchange meaningful messages?323
Chapter 29  Communication, speech and language: what falls to the share of non-humans?325
29.1Communication325
29.2Speech325
29.3Language327
Chapter 30  Direct dialogue with animals: language-training experiments330
30.1‘Token language’330
30.2The use of intermediary gesture languages to speak with primates331
30.3The use of alternative artificial languages to communicate with apes334
30.4English serves as an intermediary language: studies with parrots337
30.5Dialogue with marine mammals … and with at least one dog339
Chapter 31  A battle for the Rosetta Stone: attempts to decipher animals’ signals342
31.1The dance language of honeybees343
31.2Semantic 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 communication351
32.1Ants on the binary tree352
32.2Evaluation of ants’ ‘language’355
Concluding comments358
Part X  Social life and social intelligence in the wild361
Chapter 33  Diversity of social systems in animals363
33.1Anonymity versus individual recognition in animal communities364
33.2Levels of sociality in animal communities369
Chapter 34  If one must be sacrificed, why me? Evolutionary and behavioural aspects of altruism in animals372
Chapter 35  Intelligence in the context of the functional structure of animal communities377
35.1Caste division and polyethism in eusocial communities377
35.2Cooperative (communal) breeding: helpers sacrifice their intelligence for breeders385
35.3Working in teams: wild professional profiles390
Chapter 36  What sort of intelligence is required to navigate social landscapes?393
36.1Hierarchies and roles393
36.2Social intelligence in animals396
Chapter 37  Theory of Mind399
37.1Perspective-taking400
37.2Deceptive tactics402
37.3Knowledge attribution403
37.4Self-awareness407
Concluding comments411
References412
Index462

© Cambridge University Press


printer iconPrinter friendly versionemail iconEmail a colleague AddThis