Social cognition in ravens.

Pub Date : 2013-01-01 DOI:10.3819/ccbr.2013.80001
Thomas Bugnyar
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引用次数: 63

Abstract

Complex social life has been proposed as one of the main driving forces for the evolution of higher cognitive abilities in humans and non-human animals. Until recently, this theory has been tested mainly on mammals/primates, whereas little attention has been paid to birds. Indeed, birds provide a challenge to the theory, on one hand because they show high flexibility in group formation and composition, on the other hand because monogamous breeding pairs are the main unit of social structure in many species. Here I illustrate that non-breeding ravens Corvus corax engage in sophisticated social interactions during foraging and conflict management. While Machiavellian-type skills are found in competition for hidden food, the formation and use of valuable relationships (social bonds) seem to be key in dealing with others in daily life. I thus argue that ravens represent a promising case for testing the idea that sophisticated social cognition may evolve in systems with a given degree of social complexity, independently of phylogeny.

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乌鸦的社会认知。
复杂的社会生活被认为是人类和非人类动物进化出高级认知能力的主要驱动力之一。直到最近,这一理论主要在哺乳动物/灵长类动物身上进行了测试,而很少有人关注鸟类。事实上,鸟类对这一理论提出了挑战,一方面因为它们在群体形成和组成方面表现出高度的灵活性,另一方面因为一夫一妻制的繁殖对是许多物种社会结构的主要单位。在这里,我说明了非繁殖乌鸦Corvus corax在觅食和冲突管理中参与复杂的社会互动。虽然马基雅维利式的技能存在于争夺隐藏食物的竞争中,但有价值的关系(社会纽带)的形成和使用似乎是在日常生活中与他人打交道的关键。因此,我认为乌鸦代表了一个很有希望的案例,可以测试复杂的社会认知可能在具有一定社会复杂性的系统中进化,独立于系统发育。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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