BUFFALO, N.Y. -- According to one of the leading scholars in the
field, there is an emerging consensus among scientists that animals
share functional parallels with humans' conscious metacognition --
that is, our ability to reflect on our own mental processes and
guide and optimize them.
In two new contributions to this influential field of
comparative psychology, David Smith, PhD, of the University at
Buffalo and his fellow researchers report on continuing advances in
this domain.
Smith is a professor in the Department of Psychology at UB, and
a member of the university's graduate program in evolution, ecology
and behavior and its Center for Cognitive Science. His co-authors
on the articles are Justin J. Couchman, PhD, visiting assistant
professor of psychology, State University of New York at Fredonia,
and Michael J. Beran, PhD, senior research scientist, Language
Research Center, Georgia State University.
In "The Highs and Lows of Theoretical Interpretation in
Animal-Metacognition Research," in press at the journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Smith, Couchman
and Beran examine the theoretical and philosophical problems
associated with the attribution of self-reflective, conscious mind
to nonverbal animals.
Philosophical Transactions is a highly visible journal in the
biological sciences and one of the oldest scientific journals
published in English.
"The possibility of animal metacognition has become one of the
research focal points in comparative psychology today," Smith says,
"but, of course, this possibility poses difficult issues of
scientific interpretation and inference." In this article, they
evaluate the standards that science brings to making difficult
interpretations about animal minds, describing how standards have
been applied historically and as they perhaps should be applied.
The article concludes that macaques do show uncertainty-monitoring
capacities that are similar to those in humans.
The other contribution, "Animal Metacognition," will be
published in March by Oxford University Press in the volume
"Comparative Cognition: Experimental Explorations of Animal
Intelligence." Smith says this volume will be one of the preeminent
sources for scholarship in animal cognition for the next
decade.
In this article, Smith and his colleagues provide a
comprehensive review of the current state of the
animal-metacognition literature. They describe how Smith
inaugurated animal metacognition as a new field of study in 1995
with research on a bottlenosed dolphin. The dolphin assessed
correctly when the experimenter's trials were too difficult for
him, and adaptively declined to complete those trials.
The dolphin also showed his own distinctive set of hesitation,
wavering and worrying behaviors when the trials were too difficult.
In sharp contrast, when the trials were easy, he swam to the
responses so fast that he would make a bow-wave around himself that
would swamp Smith's delicate electronics. Smith says: "We finally
had to buy condoms to protect the equipment."
Subsequently, Smith and many collaborators also explored the
metacognitive capacities of joystick-trained macaques. These
Old-World monkeys, native to Africa and Asia, can make specific
responses to declare uncertainty about their memory. They can
respond, "Uncertain," to gain hints from the experimenters of what
to do on the first trial of new tasks. They can even respond,
"Uncertain," when their memory has been erased by trans-cranial
magnetic stimulation. Accordingly, this second article by Smith and
colleagues also supports the consensus that animals share with
humans a form of the self-reflective, metacognitive capacity.
"In all respects," says Smith, "their capacity for uncertainty
monitoring, and for responding to uncertainty adaptively, show
close correspondence to the same processes in humans.
"At present," he says, "members of South-American monkey species
or New World monkeys have not shown the same robust capacities for
uncertainty monitoring, a possible species difference that has
intriguing implications regarding the emergence of reflective mind
in monkeys, apes and humans."
Smith's ongoing research in this area is supported by generous
grants from both the National Institutes of Health and the National
Science Foundation.
Related links:
UB Graduate Program in Evolution, Ecology and Behavior:
http://www.evolutionecologybehavior.buffalo.edu
UB Center for Cognitive Science:
http://www.cogsci.buffalo.edu