Publication:
Are great apes able to reason from multi-item samples to populations of food items?

dc.bibliographiccitation.artnumbere22693
dc.bibliographiccitation.issue3
dc.bibliographiccitation.journalAmerican Journal of Primatology
dc.bibliographiccitation.volume79
dc.contributor.authorEckert, Johanna
dc.contributor.authorRakoczy, Hannes
dc.contributor.authorCall, Josep
dc.date.accessioned2018-02-12T11:28:59Z
dc.date.available2018-02-12T11:28:59Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.description.abstractInductive learning from limited observations is a cognitive capacity of fundamental importance. In humans, it is underwritten by our intuitive statistics, the ability to draw systematic inferences from populations to randomly drawn samples and vice versa. According to recent research in cognitive development, human intuitive statistics develops early in infancy. Recent work in comparative psychology has produced first evidence for analogous cognitive capacities in great apes who flexibly drew inferences from populations to samples. In the present study, we investigated whether great apes (Pongo abelii, Pan troglodytes, Pan paniscus, Gorilla gorilla) also draw inductive inferences in the opposite direction, from samples to populations. In two experiments, apes saw an experimenter randomly drawing one multi-item sample from each of two populations of food items. The populations differed in their proportion of preferred to neutral items (24:6 vs. 6:24) but apes saw only the distribution of food items in the samples that reflected the distribution of the respective populations (e.g., 4:1 vs. 1:4). Based on this observation they were then allowed to choose between the two populations. Results show that apes seemed to make inferences from samples to populations and thus chose the population from which the more favorable (4:1) sample was drawn in Experiment 1. In this experiment, the more attractive sample not only contained proportionally but also absolutely more preferred food items than the less attractive sample. Experiment 2, however, revealed that when absolute and relative frequencies were disentangled, apes performed at chance level. Whether these limitations in apes' performance reflect true limits of cognitive competence or merely performance limitations due to accessory task demands is still an open question.
dc.identifier.doi10.1002/ajp.22693
dc.identifier.pmid28877364
dc.identifier.urihttps://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gro-2/12169
dc.language.isoen
dc.notes.statusfinal
dc.titleAre great apes able to reason from multi-item samples to populations of food items?
dc.typejournal_article
dc.type.internalPublicationunknown
dspace.entity.typePublication

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