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      Learning and motor inhibitory control in crows and domestic chickens

      research-article
      1 , , 1 , 2
      Royal Society Open Science
      The Royal Society
      behavioural flexibility, carrion crows, domestic chickens, motor inhibitory control, reversal learning

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          Abstract

          Cognitive abilities allow animals to navigate through complex, fluctuating environments. In the present study, we tested the performance of a captive group of eight crows, Corvus corone and 10 domestic chickens, Gallus gallus domesticus, in the cylinder task, as a test of motor inhibitory control and reversal learning as a measure of learning ability and behavioural flexibility. Four crows and nine chickens completed the cylinder task, eight crows and six chickens completed the reversal learning experiment. Crows performed better in the cylinder task compared with chickens. In the reversal learning experiment, species did not significantly differ in the number of trials until the learning criterion was reached. The performance in the reversal learning experiment did not correlate with performance in the cylinder task in chickens. Our results suggest crows to possess better motor inhibitory control compared with chickens. By contrast, learning performance in a reversal learning task did not differ between the species, indicating similar levels of behavioural flexibility. Interestingly, we describe notable individual differences in performance. We stress the importance not only to compare cognitive performance between species but also between individuals of the same species when investigating the evolution of cognitive skills.

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          Most cited references70

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          The evolution of self-control.

          Cognition presents evolutionary research with one of its greatest challenges. Cognitive evolution has been explained at the proximate level by shifts in absolute and relative brain volume and at the ultimate level by differences in social and dietary complexity. However, no study has integrated the experimental and phylogenetic approach at the scale required to rigorously test these explanations. Instead, previous research has largely relied on various measures of brain size as proxies for cognitive abilities. We experimentally evaluated these major evolutionary explanations by quantitatively comparing the cognitive performance of 567 individuals representing 36 species on two problem-solving tasks measuring self-control. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that absolute brain volume best predicted performance across species and accounted for considerably more variance than brain volume controlling for body mass. This result corroborates recent advances in evolutionary neurobiology and illustrates the cognitive consequences of cortical reorganization through increases in brain volume. Within primates, dietary breadth but not social group size was a strong predictor of species differences in self-control. Our results implicate robust evolutionary relationships between dietary breadth, absolute brain volume, and self-control. These findings provide a significant first step toward quantifying the primate cognitive phenome and explaining the process of cognitive evolution.
            • Record: found
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            Dissociation in prefrontal cortex of affective and attentional shifts.

            The prefrontal cortex is implicated in such human characteristics as volition, planning, abstract reasoning and affect. Frontal-lobe damage can cause disinhibition such that the behaviour of a subject is guided by previously acquired responses that are inappropriate to the current situation. Here we demonstrate that disinhibition, or a loss of inhibitory control, can be selective for particular cognitive functions and that different regions of the prefrontal cortex provide inhibitory control in different aspects of cognitive processing. Thus, whereas damage to the lateral prefrontal cortex (Brodmann's area 9) in monkeys causes a loss of inhibitory control in attentional selection, damage to the orbito-frontal cortex in monkeys causes a loss of inhibitory control in 'affective' processing, thereby impairing the ability to alter behaviour in response to fluctuations in the emotional significance of stimuli. These findings not only support the view that the prefrontal cortex has multiple functions, but also provide evidence for the distribution of different cognitive functions within specific regions of prefrontal cortex.
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
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              The social brain hypothesis

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                R Soc Open Sci
                R Soc Open Sci
                RSOS
                royopensci
                Royal Society Open Science
                The Royal Society
                2054-5703
                October 20, 2021
                October 2021
                : 8
                : 10
                : 210504
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Behavioural Ecology Research Group, School of Life Sciences, Anglia Ruskin University, , Chelmsford, UK
                [ 2 ] Konrad Lorenz Forschungsstelle, Core facility, University of Vienna, , Gruenau, Austria
                Author notes

                Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5658576.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4360-363X
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5211-8201
                Article
                rsos210504
                10.1098/rsos.210504
                8527213
                34703616
                317d0bad-f1cc-4080-be6c-5438e601c84b
                © 2021 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : March 24, 2021
                : September 30, 2021
                Categories
                1001
                14
                42
                Organismal and Evolutionary Biology
                Research Articles

                behavioural flexibility,carrion crows,domestic chickens,motor inhibitory control,reversal learning

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