| Literature DB >> 35404231 |
Eszter Szabó1, Cinzia Chiandetti2, Ernő Téglás1, Elisabetta Versace3, Gergely Csibra1,4, Ágnes Melinda Kovács1, Giorgio Vallortigara5.
Abstract
Absence is a notion that is usually captured by language-related concepts like zero or negation. Whether nonlinguistic creatures encode similar thoughts is an open question, as everyday behavior marked by absence (of food, of social partners) can be explained solely by expecting presence somewhere else. We investigated 8-day-old chicks' looking behavior in response to events violating expectations about the presence or absence of an object. We found different behavioral responses to violations of presence and absence, suggesting distinct underlying mechanisms. Importantly, chicks displayed an avian signature of novelty detection to violations of absence, namely a sex-dependent left-eye-bias. Follow-up experiments excluded accounts that would explain this bias by perceptual mismatch or by representing the object at different locations. These results suggest that the ability to spontaneously form representations about the absence of objects likely belongs to the initial cognitive repertoire of vertebrate species.Entities:
Keywords: chicken; domestic chicks; lateralization; looking behavior; neuroscience; object cognition; representing absence
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35404231 PMCID: PMC9000949 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.67208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.713