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Ravens parallel great apes in physical and social cognitive skills

Biology

Ravens parallel great apes in physical and social cognitive skills

S. Pika, M. J. Sima, et al.

This groundbreaking study reveals that common ravens possess advanced cognitive skills comparable to adult apes, even at just four months old. Conducted by leading researchers including Simone Pika and Esther Herrmann, this research challenges existing notions about cognition and encourages a new comparative approach to animal intelligence.... show more
Abstract
Human children show unique cognitive skills for dealing with the social world but their cognitive performance is paralleled by great apes in many tasks dealing with the physical world. Recent studies suggested that members of a songbird family—corvids—also evolved complex cognitive skills but a detailed understanding of the full scope of their cognition was, until now, not existent. Furthermore, relatively little is known about their cognitive development. Here, we conducted the first systematic, quantitative large-scale assessment of physical and social cognitive performance of common ravens with a special focus on development. To do so, we fine-tuned one of the most comprehensive experimental test-batteries, the Primate Cognition Test Battery (PCTB), to raven features enabling also a direct, quantitative comparison with the cognitive performance of two great ape species. Full-blown cognitive skills were already present at the age of four months with subadult ravens’ cognitive performance appearing very similar to that of adult apes in tasks of physical (quantities, and causality) and social cognition (social learning, communication, and theory of mind). These unprecedented findings strengthen recent assessments of ravens’ general intelligence, and aid to the growing evidence that the lack of a specific cortical architecture does not hinder advanced cognitive skills. Difficulties in certain cognitive scales further emphasize the quest to develop comparative test batteries that tap into true species rather than human specific cognitive skills, and suggest that socialization of test individuals may play a crucial role. We conclude to pay more attention to the impact of personality on cognitive output, and a currently neglected topic in Animal Cognition—the linkage between ontogeny and cognitive performance.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Dec 10, 2020
Authors
Simone Pika, Miriam Jennifer Sima, Christian R. Blum, Esther Herrmann, Roger Mundry
Tags
common ravens
cognition
chimpanzees
orangutans
social learning
theory of mind
comparative analysis
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