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      Tool use as adaptation

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          Abstract

          Tool use is a vital component of the human behavioural repertoire. The benefits of tool use have often been assumed to be self-evident: by extending control over our environment, we have increased energetic returns and buffered ourselves from potentially harmful influences. In recent decades, however, the study of tool use in both humans and non-human animals has expanded the way we think about the role of tools in the natural world. This Theme Issue is aimed at bringing together this developing body of knowledge, gathered across multiple species and from multiple research perspectives, to chart the wider evolutionary context of this phylogenetically rare behaviour.

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          Most cited references36

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          The mentality of crows: convergent evolution of intelligence in corvids and apes.

          Discussions of the evolution of intelligence have focused on monkeys and apes because of their close evolutionary relationship to humans. Other large-brained social animals, such as corvids, also understand their physical and social worlds. Here we review recent studies of tool manufacture, mental time travel, and social cognition in corvids, and suggest that complex cognition depends on a "tool kit" consisting of causal reasoning, flexibility, imagination, and prospection. Because corvids and apes share these cognitive tools, we argue that complex cognitive abilities evolved multiple times in distantly related species with vastly different brain structures in order to solve similar socioecological problems.
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            Insightful problem solving and creative tool modification by captive nontool-using rooks.

            The ability to use tools has been suggested to indicate advanced physical cognition in animals. Here we show that rooks, a member of the corvid family that do not appear to use tools in the wild are capable of insightful problem solving related to sophisticated tool use, including spontaneously modifying and using a variety of tools, shaping hooks out of wire, and using a series of tools in a sequence to gain a reward. It is remarkable that a species that does not use tools in the wild appears to possess an understanding of tools rivaling habitual tool users such as New Caledonian crows and chimpanzees. Our findings suggest that the ability to represent tools may be a domain-general cognitive capacity rather than an adaptive specialization and questions the relationship between physical intelligence and wild tool use.
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              Primate archaeology.

              All modern humans use tools to overcome limitations of our anatomy and to make difficult tasks easier. However, if tool use is such an advantage, we may ask why it is not evolved to the same degree in other species. To answer this question, we need to bring a long-term perspective to the material record of other members of our own order, the Primates.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
                Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., B, Biol. Sci
                RSTB
                royptb
                Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
                The Royal Society
                0962-8436
                1471-2970
                19 November 2013
                19 November 2013
                : 368
                : 1630 , Theme Issue 'Tool use as adaptation' compiled and edited by Dora Biro, Michael Haslam and Christian Rutz
                : 20120408
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Zoology, University of Oxford , Oxford, UK
                [2 ]School of Archaeology, University of Oxford , Oxford, UK
                [3 ]School of Biology, University of St Andrews , St Andrews, UK
                Author notes

                One contribution of 15 to a Theme Issue ‘ Tool use as adaptation’.

                Article
                rstb20120408
                10.1098/rstb.2012.0408
                4027410
                24101619
                9cc1ab90-8fc8-4682-8e49-2af810a5e3b0

                © 2013 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

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                Introduction
                Introduction
                Custom metadata
                November 19, 2013

                Philosophy of science
                technological evolution,ontogeny,culture,cognition,anatomy,social learning
                Philosophy of science
                technological evolution, ontogeny, culture, cognition, anatomy, social learning

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