动物社会识别中的大脑和行为不对称

Pub Date : 2012-01-01 DOI:10.3819/CCBR.2012.70006
O. R. Salva, L. Regolin, E. Mascalzoni, G. Vallortigara
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引用次数: 110

摘要

这里总结的证据表明,属于遥远分类群的动物物种表现出社会识别的形式,这是一种适应大多数社会互动的复杂认知能力。论文接着回顾了这种认知能力的功能侧化的证据。本综述的主要重点是在作者实验室采用的动物模型家鸡中获得的证据,但我们也讨论了与从鱼类、两栖动物和爬行动物到其他鸟类和哺乳动物的物种数据的比较。一个一致的模式出现了,指向右半球的优势,特别是对社会伙伴和个体(或基于熟悉的)识别的歧视,而左半球可能专门用于“基于类别”的区分(例如,同种与异种)。这种结果的模式与大脑两侧更普遍的专门化和处理方式有关,右半球倾向于发展对物体的详细,全局和上下文表征,而左半球倾向于将刺激快速分配到一个类别,处理释放刺激和控制反应。
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Cerebral and behavioural assymetries in animal social recognition
Evidence is here summarized that animal species belonging to distant taxa show forms of social recognition, a sophisticated cognitive ability adaptive in most social interactions. The paper then proceeds to review evidence of functional lateralization for this cognitive ability. The main focus of this review is evidence obtained in domestic chickens, the animal model employed in the authors’ laboratories, but we also discuss comparisons with data from species ranging from fishes, amphib ians and reptiles, to other birds and mammals. A consistent pattern emerges, pointing toward a right hemisphere dominance, in particular for discrimination of social companions and individual (or familiarity-based) recognition, whereas the left hemisphere could be specialized for “category-based” distinctions (e.g., conspecifics versus heterospecifics). This pattern of results is discussed in relation to a more general specialization and processing styles of the two sides of the brain, with the right hemisphere predisposed for developing a detailed, global and contextual representation of objects, and the left hemisphere predisposed for rapid assignment of a stimulus to a category, for processing releaser stimuli and for control of responses.
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