This paper reports on the use of an eye-tracking technique to examine how chimpanzees look at facial photographs of conspecifics.
Six chimpanzees viewed a sequence of pictures presented on a monitor while their eye movements were measured by an eye tracker.
The pictures presented conspecific faces with open or closed eyes in an upright or inverted orientation in a frame. The results
demonstrated that chimpanzees looked at the eyes, nose, and mouth more frequently than would be expected on the basis of random
scanning of faces. More specifically, they looked at the eyes longer than they looked at the nose and mouth when photographs
of upright faces with open eyes were presented, suggesting that particular attention to the eyes represents a spontaneous
face-scanning strategy shared among monkeys, apes, and humans. In contrast to the results obtained for upright faces with
open eyes, the viewing times for the eyes, nose, and mouth of inverted faces with open eyes did not differ from one another.
The viewing times for the eyes, nose, and mouth of faces with closed eyes did not differ when faces with closed eyes were
presented in either an upright or inverted orientation. These results suggest the possibility that open eyes play an important
role in the configural processing of faces and that chimpanzees perceive and process open and closed eyes differently. 相似文献
Although mnemonics have been shown to be effective in remembering letter-sound associations, the use of foreign words as cues for English phonemes had not been investigated. Learning phonemes in Japan is challenging because the Japanese language is based on a different sound unit called mora (mostly consonant-vowel combinations). This study investigated the effectiveness of using mnemonic images utilizing Japanese words as cues for the phonemes, and explicit sound contrasting of phonemic sounds with morae they could be confused with, in facilitating children's acquisition of knowledge about alphabet letter-sound correspondence. The participants were 140 6th-grade Japanese students who were taught phoneme-consonant correspondence, with or without the use of mnemonics or explicit sound contrasting. Analysis of the students’ pre- and post-instruction assessments revealed significant interaction effects between types of instruction provided and instruction phase, indicating better performance in letter-sound association as a consequence of the inclusion of both mnemonics and explicit sound contrasting. 相似文献
Depression can be explained by certain behavioural patterns, especially low levels of environmental rewards; it is generally accompanied by infrequent goal-directed behaviour, increased depressed mood, and anhedonia. However, no research has statistically examined the mediating effect of environmental rewards on the relation between goal-directed behaviour and the symptoms of depressed mood or anhedonia. This study sought to determine whether such a mediating effect of environmental rewards is present in cross-sectional study. The participants included 101 patients diagnosed with major depressive disorders. Data were collected through three questionnaires measuring depression and behavioural patterns that maintain depression: the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), the Environmental Reward Observation Scale (EROS), and the Behavioral Activation for Depression Scale—Short Form (BADS-SF). Mediation analysis was conducted using depressed mood and anhedonia as dependent variables, environmental rewards as the mediating variable, and goal-directed behaviour as the independent variable. Environmental rewards significantly mediated the relationship between goal-directed behaviour and anhedonia but not that between goal-directed behaviour and depressed mood. No significant relationships were found among depressed mood, goal-directed behaviour and environmental rewards. From these results, we conclude that low levels of environmental rewards accompanied by infrequent goal-directed behaviour can lead to increased anhedonia but not depressed mood.
Tool use in apes has been considered a landmark in cognition. However, while most studies concentrate on mental operations,
there are very few studies of apes’ cognition as expressed in manual skills. This paper proposes theoretical and methodological
considerations on movement analysis as a way of assessing primate cognition. We argue that a privileged way of appraising
the characteristics of the cognitive abilities involved in tool use lies at the functional level. This implies that we focus
on how the action proceeds, and more precisely, on how the functional characteristics of the task are generated. To support
our view, we present the results of an experiment with five captive chimpanzees investigating the way how chimpanzees adapt
to hammers of various weights while cracking nuts. The movement performed in the hammering task is analyzed in terms of energy
production. Results show that chimpanzees mobilise passive as well as active forces to perform the compliant movement, that
is, they modulate the dynamics of the arm/tool system. A comparison between chimpanzees suggests that experience contributes
to this skill. The results suggest that in tool use, movements are not key per se, but only in as much as they express underlying
cognitive processes.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.