Inferences about food location in three cercopithecine species: an insight into the socioecological cognition of primates

Many animal species use a variety of cognitive strategies to locate food resources. One strategy is to make inferences by exclusion, i.e., perceiving the absence of reward as a cue that another location should be investigated. The use of such advanced cognitive strategies may be more prominent in sp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animal cognition 2015-07, Vol.18 (4), p.821-830
Hauptverfasser: Petit, Odile, Dufour, Valérie, Herrenschmidt, Marie, De Marco, Arianna, Sterck, Elisabeth H. M., Call, Josep
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container_end_page 830
container_issue 4
container_start_page 821
container_title Animal cognition
container_volume 18
creator Petit, Odile
Dufour, Valérie
Herrenschmidt, Marie
De Marco, Arianna
Sterck, Elisabeth H. M.
Call, Josep
description Many animal species use a variety of cognitive strategies to locate food resources. One strategy is to make inferences by exclusion, i.e., perceiving the absence of reward as a cue that another location should be investigated. The use of such advanced cognitive strategies may be more prominent in species that are known to frequently solve social challenges, and inferential reasoning has mainly been investigated in social species such as corvids, dogs, dolphins and non-human primates. In this paper, we investigate how far social intricacy may explain the disparity of reasoning performances observed in three cercopithecine species that differ in the density of their social network and the diversity of their social partners. We used standard reasoning tasks, testing the volume concept and inference by exclusion using visual and auditory modalities. We showed that Old World monkeys can infer the location of invisible food by exclusion. In addition, Tonkean macaques and olive baboons had greater performances in most tasks compared to rhesus macaques. These responses are consistent with the social complexity displayed by these three species. We suggest that the cognitive strategies required to navigate through a demanding social world are involved in the understanding of the physical domain.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10071-015-0848-2
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subjects Animal cognition
Animal species
Animals
Appetitive Behavior
Behavioral Sciences
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Cercopithecinae - psychology
Cognition
Environmental Sciences
Food
Food resources
Life Sciences
Monkeys & apes
Original Paper
Problem Solving
Psychology Research
Social Behavior
Thinking
Zoology
title Inferences about food location in three cercopithecine species: an insight into the socioecological cognition of primates
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