Inhibitory Control and Response Selection in Problem Solving: How Cotton-Top Tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) Overcome a Bias for Selecting the Larger Quantity of Food
Publication Type: |
Journal Article |
Year of Publication: |
2005 |
Authors: |
J.D. Kralik |
Publication/Journal: |
Journal of Comparative Psychology |
Keywords: |
*choice behavior, animal behavior, animal behaviour, animals, choice behaviour, feeding behavior, feeding behaviour, female, inhibition (psychology), male, problem solving, saguinus |
ISBN: |
0735-7036 |
Abstract:
When presented with a choice between 1 and 3 pieces of food in a type of reversed contingency task, 4
cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) consistently chose the 3 pieces of food and received nothing,
even though the choice of 1 piece would have yielded 3. However, in a task in which the tamarins
received the 1 piece of food when they chose it, all subjects learned to select 1 over 3. Thus, the tamarins’
prior failure on the reversed contingency task did not result entirely from an inherent inability to suppress
the prepotent response of reaching to the larger of 2 quantities of food. After the experience of selecting
the smaller quantity and receiving it, all of the tamarins solved the version of the reversed contingency
task that they failed initially. These results suggest that the tamarins’ initial failure may have reflected
a difficulty with selecting an alternative response option.