Causal reasoning in New Caledonian crows <subtitle>Ruling out spatial analogies and sampling error</subtitle>

A large number of studies have failed to find conclusive evidence for causal reasoning in nonhuman animals. For example, when animals are required to avoid a trap while extracting a reward from a tube they appear to learn about the surface-level features of the task, rather than about the task’s cau...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alex Taylor, Reece Roberts, Gavin Hunt, Russell Gray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2009-07-01
Series:Communicative & Integrative Biology
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.4161/cib.2.4.8224
Description
Summary:A large number of studies have failed to find conclusive evidence for causal reasoning in nonhuman animals. For example, when animals are required to avoid a trap while extracting a reward from a tube they appear to learn about the surface-level features of the task, rather than about the task’s causal regularities. We recently reported that New Caledonian crows solved a two-trap-tube task and then were able to immediately solve a novel, visually distinct problem, the trap-table task. Such transfer suggests these crows were reasoning causally. However, there are two other possible explanations for the successful transfer: sampling bias and the use of a spatial, rather than a causal, analogy. Here we present data that rule out these explanations.
ISSN:1942-0889