Authors
Amanda M Seed, Sabine Tebbich, Nathan J Emery, Nicola S Clayton
Publication date
2006/4/4
Journal
Current Biology
Volume
16
Issue
7
Pages
697-701
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Although animals (particularly tool-users) are capable of solving physical tasks in the laboratory [1–7], the degree to which they understand them in terms of their underlying physical forces is a matter of contention. Here, using a new paradigm, the two-trap tube task, we report the performance of non-tool-using rooks. In contrast to the low success rates of previous studies using trap-tube problems [1–4], seven out of eight rooks solved the initial task, and did so rapidly. Instead of the usual, conceptually flawed [8] control, we used a series of novel transfer tasks to test for understanding. All seven transferred their solution across a change in stimuli. However, six out of seven were unable to transfer to two further tasks, which did not share any one visual constant. One female was able to solve these further transfer tasks. Her result is suggestive evidence that rooks are capable of sophisticated physical cognition, if not …
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