Authors
Sérgio PC Correia, Anthony Dickinson, Nicola S Clayton
Publication date
2007/5/15
Journal
Current Biology
Volume
17
Issue
10
Pages
856-861
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Planning for the future has been considered to be a uniquely human trait [1–3]. However, recent studies challenge this hypothesis by showing that food-caching Western scrub-jays (Aphelocoma californica) can relate their previous experience as thieves to the possibility of future cache theft by another bird [4], are sensitive to the state of their caches at recovery ([5] and S. De Kort, S.P.C.C., D. Alexis, A.D., and N.S.C., unpublished data), and can plan for tomorrow's breakfast [6]. Although these results suggest that scrub-jays are capable of future planning, the degree to which these birds act independently of their current motivational state is a matter of contention. The Bischof-Köhler hypothesis [1] holds that nonhuman animals cannot anticipate and act toward the satisfaction of a future need not currently experienced or cued by their present motivational state. Using specific satiety to control for the jays' current and …
Total citations
200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024737212221312425132424749182278105