Published on 01 January 2024
Decision-making flexibility in New Caledonian crows, young children and adult humans in a multi-dimensional tool-use task
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We present thefirst study on flexible decision-making in an inhibitory control tool-use taskin 3-5-year-old children, adult humans and tool-making New Caledonian crows, using a paradigm previously used to test non-tool making Goffin's cockatoos. Tasks varied in relational complexity,manipulating reward quality and tool functionality. Suprisingly, adult humans and corvids performed better than children in selecting an immediate reward when a tool was not necessary. In addition, comparisons of our results with those previously published on parrots show that adult humans and cockatoos performed better than crows and children in selecting an immediate reward over a non-functional tool. By contrast, human adults and children outperformed the birds when all task components were present, suggesting that both the cockatoos and corvids struggled to attend to multiple variables without extended experience.
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Publication Details
Subfield
Demography
Field
Social Sciences
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
37%
Source
Scholar Data Model