Reasoning Flashcards

1
Q

define reasoning

A

reason is a process of thinking during which the individual os aware of a problem, identifies, evaluates and decides on an answer

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2
Q

Reasoning by analogy, Gillan, Premack, Woodruff (1981)

A

A relationship between two objects can imply the same relationship between other objects
- working with Sarah the chimpanzee
- forced choice task: Sarah shown different shape, some bigger, some smaller/change in colour
- Sarah has to choose what shape she would add in to make the right side equal to the left
- Sarah was getting 45/50 on forced choice tasks
- Sarah also did another type of trail to choose what sign fits with the pictures e.g. equal sign
- was getting 26/36 on these trials
- researchers concluded that Sarah didn’t need to know the relationship/meaning between the objects to get the answer
- also tested on household objects which requires memory and Sarah scored 15/18 correct

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3
Q

Crows: match-to-sample, Smirnova et al., (2015)

A
  • Crows shown 3 cards
  • had to choose a card from the side to match a card from the middle
  • e.g. if shown 2 circles they would pick the card that had 2 of the same shape over the one with 2 different shapes
  • Results: 77.78% correct in relational matching
  • Results: 72.69% correct in identity matching
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4
Q

criticisms of the crows: match-to-sample

A
  • crows could be smelling or hearing the mealworms which inform their choice instead of the symbol
  • also could respond how they wanted so could be using a different system than expected
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5
Q

Parrots: Match-to-sample, Obozova et al (2015)

A

Relational matching: 80.56%
Identity matching: 74.54%

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6
Q

Can we look at animals ability to look at differences and similarities at the same time?, pepperberg (2021)

A
  • Objects can have multiple features: colour, material (matter), shape
  • Alex the parrot could vocalize features of objects, when asked “what’s same?” or “what’s different?” about two objects, he could respond (80% accuracy [chance 33%]). On novel objects he was correct 85% of the time on the first trial.
  • To check he was responding to the question and not just vocalizing the singular feature that was different, in other tests he was asked questions where there were two possible answers (~90% accuracy [chance = 66%])
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7
Q

Are monkeys logical?, McGonigle & Chalmers (1977)

A

Squirrels will always choose container A as they have always been rewarded peanuts when choosing this
- they never choose E as they have never been rewarded from it
- shows reinforcement history matters
- This could transfer B and D, leading to B>D as B is assoicated woth A and D is associated with E
- Further evidence from Zentall and Sherburne (1994) used pigeons: A reinforced 100% of the time and C os rewarded 50% of the time
- found there was some value transfer to B and D and B>D

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7
Q

Social dominance, Paz-y-Miño et al. (2004)

A
  • study look at Pinyon Jays (birds)
  • Social groups of birds and worked out their social rank by looking at contest over peanuts
  • Letter group (A>B), number group (1>2) based on dominance, A and 1 were more dominant
  • Experimental condition: observes member of own group losing
  • Experimental group: show more submissive behaviour than control group
  • Control condition: observes member of other group losing
    Test observer (3) against member of other group
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