| Literature DB >> 19238466 |
Cornelia Schrauf1, Josep Call.
Abstract
Much work has been done on visual discrimination in primates over the past decade. In contrast, very little is known about the relevance of non-visual information in discrimination learning. We investigated weight and achromatic color (color, henceforth) discrimination in bonobos, gorillas and orangutans, using the exchange paradigm in which subjects have to give objects to the experimenter in order to receive a reward. Unlike previous studies, subjects were not trained to lift objects because lifting the objects was an integral part of the exchange procedure. This methodology also allowed us a direct comparison between visual and weight discrimination. We presented 12 subjects (5 bonobos, 2 gorillas and 5 orangutans) with two sets of objects corresponding to two conditions. The objects in the color condition (white/black) differed only in color and those in the weight condition (light/heavy) differed only in weight. Five apes learned to discriminate weight and six to discriminate color. Subjects learned color discrimination faster than weight discrimination. Our results suggest that bonobos and orangutans are sensitive to differences in weight and able to learn discriminating objects that differ in this property.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19238466 PMCID: PMC2698969 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-009-0216-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Cogn ISSN: 1435-9448 Impact factor: 3.084
Participants of the exchange experiment
| Species | Subject | Sex | Age | Color condition | Weight condition | Order | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Correct | Session | Correct | Session | |||||
| Orang | Padana | Female | 8 | White | 36 | Light |
| b-w |
| Orang | Pini | Female | 18 | Black | 36 | Light |
| b-w |
| Orang | Dokana | Female | 17 | Black |
| Heavy | 36 | b-w |
| Orang | Dunja | Female | 33 | White | 36 | Heavy | 36 | w-b |
| Orang | Bimbo | Male | 26 | White | 36 | Light | 36 | w-b |
| Bonobo | Joey | Male | 23 | Black |
| Heavy | 36 | b-w |
| Bonobo | Limbuko | Male | 10 | Black |
| Light |
| w-b |
| Bonobo | Kuno | Male | 9 | White |
| Light |
| w-b |
| Bonobo | Ulindi | Female | 12 | White |
| Heavy |
| b-w |
| Bonobo | Yasa | Female | 9 | Black | 36 | Heavy | 36 | w-b |
| Gorilla | Bebe | Female | 26 | Black |
| Heavy | 36 | w-b |
| Gorilla | Viringika | Female | 11 | Black | 36 | Heavy | 36 | b-w |
Numbers in bold indicate successful performance. Correct: type of correct stimulus, session: session number in which the criterion (6 out of 6 correct choices) was reached. Order: order in which the two tests were performed (b-w: subjects were first tested for color and thereafter for weight, w-b: vice versa)
Fig. 1Experimental set-up for the exchange experiment: exchange objects are placed on a ledge inside the ape’s cage. The experimenter shows a reward that will be given to the subject after it has returned a correct object. a Ape lifts an object. b Ape gives an object to the experimenter. Drawing by Sandra Michaelis