Are there disciplinary boundaries in the comparative study of primate cognition?

Héctor M. Manrique , Juan J. Canales
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Abstract

A view continues to gain momentum that regards investigation of the cognition of great apes in captive settings as affording us a model for human cognitive evolution. Researchers from disciplines such as comparative psychology, anthropology, and even archaeology, seem eager to put their theories to the test by using great apes as their chosen experimental model. Questions addressed currently by comparative psychologists have long been the object of attention by neurophysiologists, psychobiologists and neuroscientists, who, however, often use rodents and monkeys as the species of choice. Whereas comparative psychology has been influenced greatly by ethology, much neuroscience has developed against a background of physiology and medicine. This separation of the intellectual contexts wherein they have arisen and flourished has impeded the development of fluid interaction between comparative psychologists and researchers in the other disciplines. We feel that it would be beneficial for comparative psychologists and neuroscientists to combine research endeavours far more often, in order to address common questions of interest related to cognition. We regard interdisciplinary cross-pollination to be particularly desirable, even if many comparative psychologists lack deep expertise about the workings of the brain, and even if many neuroscientists lack expert knowledge about the behaviour of different species. Furthermore, we believe that anthropology, archaeology, human evolutionary studies, and related disciplines, may well provide us with significant contextual knowledge about the physical and temporal background to the evolution in humans of specific cognitive skills. To that end, we urge researchers to dismantle methodological, conceptual and historical disciplinary boundaries, in order to strengthen cross-disciplinary cooperation in order to broaden and deepen our insights into the cognition of nonhuman and human primates.

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灵长类动物认知的比较研究是否存在学科界限?
一种观点继续获得势头,认为对圈养环境中类人猿认知的研究为我们提供了一个人类认知进化的模型。来自比较心理学、人类学甚至考古学等学科的研究人员似乎急于通过使用类人猿作为他们选择的实验模型来检验他们的理论。比较心理学家目前提出的问题长期以来一直是神经生理学家、心理生物学家和神经科学家关注的对象,然而,他们经常将啮齿动物和猴子作为选择物种。尽管比较心理学受到行为学的巨大影响,但许多神经科学都是在生理学和医学的背景下发展起来的。它们产生和繁荣的知识背景的分离阻碍了比较心理学家和其他学科研究人员之间流畅互动的发展。我们认为,比较心理学家和神经科学家更经常地将研究工作结合起来,以解决与认知相关的常见问题,这将是有益的。我们认为跨学科交叉授粉是特别可取的,即使许多比较心理学家缺乏对大脑工作的深入专业知识,即使许多神经科学家缺乏对不同物种行为的专业知识。此外,我们相信人类学、考古学、人类进化研究和相关学科很可能为我们提供关于人类特定认知技能进化的物理和时间背景的重要背景知识。为此,我们敦促研究人员打破方法论、概念和历史学科的界限,以加强跨学科合作,从而拓宽和深化我们对非人类和人类灵长类动物认知的见解。
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