| Literature DB >> 27406172 |
B Szabo1,2, T Bugnyar3, A M I Auersperg4.
Abstract
Different types of social relationships can influence individual learning strategies in structured groups of animals. Studies on a number of avian species have suggested that local and/or stimulus enhancement are important ingredients of the respective species' exploration modes. Our aim was to identify the role of enhancement during object manipulation in different social contexts. We used focal observations to identify a linear dominance hierarchy as well as affiliative relationships between individuals in a group of 14 Goffin's cockatoos (Cacatua goffiniana, formerly goffini). Thereafter, in an unrewarded object choice task, several pairs of subjects were tested for a possible influence of social enhancement (local vs. stimulus) in three conditions: dominance, affiliation, and kinship. Our results suggest strong individual biases. Whereas previous studies on ravens and kea had indicated that enhancement in a non-food-related task was influenced by the social relationship between a demonstrator and an observer (affiliated - nonaffiliated), we found no such effects in our study group. In this context, Goffin's cockatoos' object learning seems to take place more on an individual level, despite their generally high motivation to manipulate nonfood items.Entities:
Keywords: Avian cognition; Dominance hierarchy; Parrot; Social learning
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27406172 PMCID: PMC5325860 DOI: 10.3758/s13420-016-0235-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Learn Behav ISSN: 1543-4494 Impact factor: 1.986
Comparative summary of the methodologies used within the presented sample of avian literature testing for social enhancement: Study, species, sample size, age of subjects., presentation of objects during the demonstration and the test phase, the subjects prior familiarity with the used objects, type of object presentation, food/no-food involved, the appearance of the introduced objects, the type of contact between the demonstrator and the subject during the demonstration and the test phase, if demonstrators participated as subjects during the study and vice versa and if the arrangement of the setup was observable to the subjects
| Presentation of Objects | Food Involve-ment | Contact | Experimenter Induced Enhancement | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Species |
| Subject Age | Demon-stration | Test | Object Familiarity | Object Use | Object Appearance | Demon-stration | Test | Role Switch | ||
| Schwab, Bugnyar, & Kotrschal ( |
| 20 | juvenile | one object (=target) | 5 objects including target | unfamiliar | once by pair | no | grouped by shape/size, target identical | visual contact | no contact | yes | possible |
|
| 20 | juvenile/ adult | 2 distinctly colored boxes | 2 distinctly colored boxes | familiar | once by pair | yes | grouped by color, identical | visual contact | no contact | yes | possible | |
| Schwab, Bugnyar, Schloegl, & Kotrschal ( |
| 12 | juvenile | one object (=target) | 5 objects including target | unfamiliar | once by observer | no | grouped by limited dissimilarity, target identical | visual contact | no contact | yes | possible |
| Miller et al. ( |
| 115 | juvenile/ adult | 2 pairs | 2 pairs | familiar | repeatedly | partly | pair of same size & shape, different color | physical contact | physical contact | possible | possible |
|
| 115 | juvenile/ adult | 2 pairs | 2 pairs | familiar | repeatedly | partly | pair of same size & shape, different color | physical contact | physical contact | possible | possible | |
| Heyse ( |
| 11 | juvenile/ adult | 4 pairs | 4 pairs | unfamiliar | repeatedly | no | objects in a pair of different complexity, 4 pairs identical | physical contact | physical contact | possible | possible |
|
| 11 | juvenile/ adult | 4 pairs | 4 pairs | unfamiliar | repeatedly | no | objects in a pair of different complexity, 4 pairs identical | physical contact | physical contact | possible | possible | |
| Current study |
| 14 | juvenile/ adult | 2 pairs | 2 pairs | partly familiar | once by observer | no | first & third similar, second & fourth similar, not identical | visual contact | no contact | yes | possible |
List of social behaviors used to calculate the hierarchy and affiliations (affiliative behaviors that occurred <2 times in total were not included into the analysis)
| Behavior | Description (Recorded Information) |
|---|---|
|
| |
|
| One bird touches the feathers of another bird with its beak for longer than 2 s (who touches whom). It often incorporates up and down or sideward movements of the beak through the plumage. |
|
| |
|
| One bird approaches another without physical contact, forcing it to retreat while producing defensive vocalization (who is the attacker, whom the recipient). |
|
| One bird approaches another by engaging in physical contact, forcing it to retreat while producing defensive vocalization (who is the attacker, whom the recipient). |
|
| One bird approaches another, forcing it to silently retreat within 2 s (who is the attacker, whom the recipient). |
|
| One bird approaches another, forcing it to silently retreat after being visually threateneda within 2 s (who is the attacker, whom the recipient). |
aA visual threat is generally indicated by extension of the crest and bill gaping (sometimes additionally with fluffing of the plumage and fanning of the tail). Physical contact is not achieved.
Fig. 1Simplified design of the enhancement test. (Left) Whole setup. (Right top) Object positions on the table. (Right bottom) Example of one of the object sets used during the test
Name, sex, age, and rank position of each subject within the study group, as well as the dyads chosen within every enhancement test condition and the number of trials each pair participated in
| Subject | Sex | Age (yrs) | Rank Pos. | Cond. | Partner | Trials | Pers. S.1 | Pers. S.2 | Pref. Test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pipin | m | 4 | 1 | dom | Dolittle | 5 | .1 | .4 | .72 |
| Figaro | m | 5 | 2 | dom | Konrad | 5 | .9 | 1.0 | .31 |
| Zozo | m | 2,75 | 3 | aff | Olympia | 5 | .9 | .9 | .47 |
| Kiwi | m | 2,75 | 4 | kin | Heidi | 5 | 1.0 | .8 | .81 |
| Heidi | f | 2,75 | 5 | dom | Mayday | 5 | .7 | .9 | .34 |
| Konrad | m | 2,75 | 6 | dom | Figaro | 5 | .6 | .1 | .42 |
| Dolittle | m | 1,75 | 7 | dom | Pipin | 5 | .3 | .4 | .31 |
| Muppet | m | 2,75 | 8 | kin | MoneyP. | 5 | .5 | .5 | .48 |
| Money Penny | f | 2,75 | 9 | dom | Lady | 1 | 0 | .1 | .35 |
| Olympia | f | 2,5 | 10 | dom | Pipin | 5 | .5 | .1 | .18 |
| Fini | f | 5 | 11 | dom | Figaro | 3**
| .2 | .6 | .45 |
| Mayday | f | 1,75 | 12 | dom | Heidi | 5 | 1.0 | .3 | .43 |
| LadyBird* | f | 2,75 | 13 | dom | MoneyP. | 0 | 0 | 0 | .38 |
| Pims | f | 4 | 14 | aff | Fini | 0 | .9 | 1.0 | .36 |
The last three columns show the probability of choosing the right side during perseverance test session one and two as well as during the preference test. *Excluded due to motivation loss. **Excluded due to pair formation.
Fig. 2Testing situation during the demonstration phase in the experimental compartment. The subject is in the cage, observing the demonstrator on the table (left) and manipulating an object (right). The position of the video camera is visible in the left picture
Fig. 3Mean frequencies and 95 % confidence intervals of subject choices based on demonstration, in the three tested conditions (dominance, kinship, and affiliation). SSST, same side, same type; SSDT, same side, different type; DSST, different side, same type; DSDT, different side, different type