| Literature DB >> 9163934 |
W E Shields1, J D Smith, D A Washburn.
Abstract
The authors asked whether animals, like humans, use an uncertain response adaptively to escape indeterminate stimulus relations. Humans and monkeys were placed in a same-different task, known to be challenging for animals. Its difficulty was increased further by reducing the size of the stimulus differences, thereby making many same and different trials difficult to tell apart. Monkeys do escape selectively from these threshold trials, even while coping with 7 absolute stimulus levels concurrently. Monkeys even adjust their response strategies on short time scales according to the local task conditions. Signal-detection and optimality analyses confirm the similarity of humans' and animals' performances. Whereas associative interpretations account poorly for these results, an intuitive uncertainty construct does so easily. The authors discuss the cognitive processes that allow uncertainty's adaptive use and recommend further comparative studies of metacognition.Entities:
Keywords: NASA Discipline Space Human Factors; Non-NASA Center
Mesh:
Year: 1997 PMID: 9163934 DOI: 10.1037//0096-3445.126.2.147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Psychol Gen ISSN: 0022-1015