Authors
Nicola S Clayton, Daniel P Griffiths, Nathan J Emery, Anthony Dickinson
Publication date
2001/9/29
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
Volume
356
Issue
1413
Pages
1483-1491
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
A number of psychologists have suggested that episodic memory is a uniquely human phenomenon and, until recently, there was little evidence that animals could recall a unique past experience and respond appropriately. Experiments on food–caching memory in scrub jays question this assumption. On the basis of a single caching episode, scrub jays can remember when and where they cached a variety of foods that differ in the rate at which they degrade, in a way that is inexplicable by relative familiarity. They can update their memory of the contents of a cache depending on whether or not they have emptied the cache site, and can also remember where another bird has hidden caches, suggesting that they encode rich representations of the caching event. They make temporal generalizations about when perishable items should degrade and also remember the relative time since caching when the same food …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
NS Clayton, DP Griffiths, NJ Emery, A Dickinson - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of …, 2001