Comparative Cognition Today

23
January 12, 2010

description

Comparative Cognition Today. January 12, 2010. Overview. What is comparative cognition? What is studied? What approaches are taken?. What is comparative cognition?. Comparative Cognition. Darwin: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Comparative Cognition Today

Page 1: Comparative Cognition Today

January 12, 2010

Page 2: Comparative Cognition Today

What is comparative cognition?

What is studied?

What approaches are taken?

Page 3: Comparative Cognition Today
Page 4: Comparative Cognition Today

Darwin:•“the difference in mind between man

and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of kind”

Comparative cognition is:• A comparison of mental abilities of species• Cognitive abilities and capabilities

e.g. capabilities: Alex the Grey Parrot

Page 5: Comparative Cognition Today

Review from last class• American vs European approaches

Species used:

From Shettleworth (2009), Behav Process. 80, 210-217

Page 6: Comparative Cognition Today

Why is animal behaviour studied in psych department, not zoology?

4 main reasons:• Uniqueness• Control & irreversible effects • Simplicity & generality• Continuity

Page 7: Comparative Cognition Today

Certain animals have unique properties that allow us to study subjects which could not be studied any other way:• Mice and genes• Giant Squid Axons• High pecking rates of pigeons• Echolocation in bats• Absolute pitch in songbirds

Page 8: Comparative Cognition Today

For practical and ethical reasons, we can have greater control in animals over both:• Genes• Environments

Irreversible Effects:• Drugs, lesions, gene manipulations

Page 9: Comparative Cognition Today

Insights from Model Systems• Mendel studied peas• Impact on study of schizophrenia

Generality of principles• Building blocks of cognition

Page 10: Comparative Cognition Today

Neurobiological continuity• e.g. Hippocampal lesions in mice and men

Evolutionary continuity• Divergent and convergent evolution• Analagous vs homologous traits

Page 11: Comparative Cognition Today

Tim

e

HumansRatsMicePigeons

Page 12: Comparative Cognition Today

Tim

e

HumansRatsMicePigeons

Page 13: Comparative Cognition Today
Page 14: Comparative Cognition Today

3 main areas:

• Basic processes

• Physical cognition

• Social cognition

Page 15: Comparative Cognition Today

Includes:• Perception• Attention• Memory• Associative leaning• Category and concept learning

Page 16: Comparative Cognition Today

Includes:• Time• Space• Number• Tool Use• Causal understanding

Page 17: Comparative Cognition Today

Includes:• Social networks

Dominance structures Social Relationships Morality and ethics

• Theory of Mind• Social learning

Observational learning Imitation

• Communication & Language

Page 18: Comparative Cognition Today
Page 19: Comparative Cognition Today

How is information acquired or learned?

How is information processed?

How is information retained?

Page 20: Comparative Cognition Today

Types of Studies 4 approaches to studying animal

behaviour:• Naturalistic Observation (Ethological)• Field Experiments• Behavioural Experiments• Behavioural Neuroscience (Physiological)

Page 21: Comparative Cognition Today

Named for ethologist Niko Tinbergen

Proximate (How) vs Ultimate (Why)

Page 22: Comparative Cognition Today

Causation: • Brain – e.g. Broca’s area• Hormones – e.g. Testosterone stimulates

aggressive behaviour• Pheremones – e.g. Spatial behaviour,

tracking Development or Ontogeny

• Nature/Nurture – genes and environment• Critical periods – e.g. language or imprinting

Page 23: Comparative Cognition Today

Function or Adaptation• How has an organism evolved for survival?• e.g. Birds fly south for warmth & food• e.g. Mammal nurture young

Phylogeny• Evolutionary explanations, other than

adaptation• e.g. Genetic drift