在动物园训练对实验一无所知的海豹参与发声学习实验

Diandra Duengen, Andrea Ravignani
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摘要

港海豹(Phoca vitulina)是动物园中常见的物种,它的发声学习倾向在科学上很有价值。在人类的照料下,可以训练海豹将发声与提示联系起来。这种能力被称为 "发声使用学习",其特点是学会在特定环境中使用一种发声方式。在哺乳动物中,海豹是研究发声学习的主要对象。然而,关于港海豹发声学习能力的报道寥寥无几,而关于如何训练或测试这种能力的记录更是少之又少。在这里,我们研究了如何以及是否可以训练两只在人类照料下的实验幼稚的港海豹参与科学实验。我们描述了两只海豹在两个基本发声学习实验中的训练和测试情况。我们通过操作性条件反射方法训练海豹在辨别性刺激(SD)出现时发声,并测试它们 i) 在两种不同的 SD 出现时发声和不发声的能力,以及 ii) 在两种不同的 SD 出现时发出两种不同声音的能力。两只海豹都学会了这些任务:第一项任务分别在 118 次试验(22 次误差为标准)和 220 次试验(40 次误差为标准)内完成,第二项任务分别在 480 次试验(158 次误差为标准)和 380 次试验(94 次误差为标准)内完成。我们的研究结果证实,海豹有能力学习发声用法,并进一步表明,将不同的发声与不同的SD联系起来可能比在SD上发声和保持沉默对认知的要求更高。
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Training Experimentally Naive Harbor Seals to Participate in Vocal Learning Experiments in a Zoo
Harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) are a common zoo species that show a scientifically valuable propensity for vocal learning. Under human care, the seals can be trained to associate vocalizations with cues. This ability is termed vocal usage learning and is characterized by learning to use a vocalization in a specific context. Among mammals, seals are prime candidates to investigate vocal learning. Yet, only a handful of reports exist on harbor seal vocal learning abilities and even less document how these were trained or tested. Here, we investigate how, and if, two experimentally naive harbor seals under human care, can be trained to participate in scientific experiments. We describe the training and testing of two seals in two basic vocal learning experiments. We trained the animals to vocalize upon the presentation of discriminative stimuli (SD) through operant conditioning methods and tested their abilities to i) vocalize and refrain from vocalizing on two distinct SDs, and ii) produce two different vocalizations upon the presentation of two different SDs. Both seals learned the tasks: the first task was achieved within 118 trials (22 errors to criterion) and 220 trials (40 errors to criterion), the second task within 480 trials (158 errors to criterion) and 380 trials (94 errors to criterion), respectively. Our results confirm that harbor seals are capable of vocal usage learning and further suggest that associating individually distinct vocalizations with different SDs may be more cognitively demanding than vocalizing and being silent on SD.
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