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Do Capuchin Monkeys Chimpanzees

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Do Capuchin Monkeys, Chimpanzees and Children form Overhypotheses from Minimal Input? A Hierarchical Bayesian Modelling Approach

Elisa Felsche

Dr

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

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Wednesday, March 9, 2022

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Wednesday, March 9, 2022

11:00 AM America/Chicago

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Host: Analogical Minds

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Analogical Minds

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Abstract

Abstract concepts are a powerful tool to store information efficiently and to make wide-ranging predictions in new situations based on sparse data. Whereas looking-time studies point towards an early emergence of this ability in human infancy, other paradigms like the relational match to sample task often show a failure to detect abstract concepts like same and different until the late preschool years. Similarly, non-human animals have difficulties solving those tasks and often succeed only after long training regimes. Given the huge influence of small task modifications, there is an ongoing debate about the conclusiveness of these findings for the development and phylogenetic distribution of abstract reasoning abilities. Here, we applied the concept of “overhypotheses” which is well known in the infant and cognitive modeling literature to study the capabilities of 3 to 5-year-old children, chimpanzees, and capuchin monkeys in a unified and more ecologically valid task design. In a series of studies, participants themselves sampled reward items from multiple containers or witnessed the sampling process. Only when they detected the abstract pattern governing the reward distributions within and across containers, they could optimally guide their behavior and maximize the reward outcome in a novel test situation. We compared each species’ performance to the predictions of a probabilistic hierarchical Bayesian model capable of forming overhypotheses at a first and second level of abstraction and adapted to their species-specific reward preferences.

Topics

abstract conceptsbayesiancapuchin monkeyschimpanzeescognitioncomparative cognitiondevelopmenthierarchical Bayesian modelingoverhypothesesprimate cognitionreward distributiontask modifications

About the Speaker

Elisa Felsche

Dr

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

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