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I scan, therefore I decline: The time course of difficulty monitoring in humans (homo sapiens) and macaques (macaca mulatta)
- Source :
- Journal of Comparative Psychology. 132:152-165
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- American Psychological Association (APA), 2018.
-
Abstract
- The study of nonhumans' metacognitive judgments about trial difficulty has grown into an important comparative literature. However, the potential for associative-learning confounds in this area has left room for behaviorist interpretations that are strongly asserted and hotly debated. This article considers how researchers may be able to observe animals' strategic cognitive processes more clearly by creating temporally extended problems within which associative cues are not always immediately available. We asked humans and rhesus macaques to commit to completing spatially extended mazes or to decline completing them through a trial-decline response. The mazes could sometimes be completed successfully, but other times had a constriction that blocked completion. A deliberate, systematic scanning process could preevaluate a maze and determine the appropriate response. Latency analyses charted the time course of the evaluative process. Both humans and macaques appeared, from the pattern of their latencies, to scan the mazes through before committing to completing them. Thus monkeys, too, can base trial-decline responses on temporally extended evaluation processes, confirming that those responses have strategic cognitive-processing bases in addition to behavioral-reactive bases. The results also show the value of temporally and spatially extended problems to let researchers study the trajectory of animals' online cognitive processes. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Process (engineering)
Metacognition
PsycINFO
Commit
Spatial memory
Article
050105 experimental psychology
Young Adult
Cognition
Reaction Time
Animals
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Animal cognition
050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology
Maze Learning
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Visual search
Appetitive Behavior
05 social sciences
Macaca mulatta
Female
Psychology (miscellaneous)
Cues
Psychology
Spatial Navigation
Cognitive psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19392087 and 07357036
- Volume :
- 132
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Comparative Psychology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....da4375e5530168a4ffcb162562706efb