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Theory of mind in animals

Theory of mind in animals is an extension to non-human animals of the philosophical and psychological concept of theory of mind (ToM), sometimes known as mentalisation or mind-reading. It involves an inquiry into whether non-human animals have the ability to attribute mental states (such as intention, desires, pretending, knowledge) to themselves and others, including recognition that others have mental states that are different from their own.[1][2][3] To investigate this issue experimentally, researchers place non-human animals in situations where their resulting behavior can be interpreted as supporting ToM or not.

The existence of theory of mind in non-human animals is controversial. On the one hand, one hypothesis proposes that some non-human animals have complex cognitive processes which allow them to attribute mental states to other individuals, sometimes called "mind-reading" while another proposes that non-human animals lack these skills and depend on more simple learning processes such as associative learning;[4] or in other words, they are simply behaviour-reading.

Several studies have been designed specifically to test whether non-human animals possess theory of mind by using interspecific or intraspecific communication. Several taxa have been tested including primates, birds and canines. Positive results have been found; however, these are often qualified as showing only low-grade ToM, or rejected as not convincing by other researchers.

History and development edit

 
Much of the early work on ToM in animals focused on the understanding chimpanzees have of human knowledge

The term "theory of mind" was originally proposed by Premack and Woodruff in 1978.[2][5] Early studies focused almost entirely on studying if chimpanzees could understand the knowledge of humans. This approach turned out not to be particularly fruitful and 20 years later, Heyes, reviewing all the extant data, observed that there had been "no substantial progress" in the subject area.[6]

A 2000 paper[7] approached the issue differently by examining competitive foraging behaviour between primates of the same species (conspecifics). This led to the rather limited conclusion that "chimpanzees know what conspecifics do and do not see".[8]

In 2007, Penn and Povinelli wrote "there is still little consensus on whether or not nonhuman animals understand anything about unobservable mental states or even what it would mean for a non-verbal animal to understand the concept of a 'mental state'." They went on further to suggest that ToM was "any cognitive system, whether theory-like or not, that predicts or explains the behaviour of another agent by postulating that unobservable inner states particular to the cognitive perspective of that agent causally modulate that agent's behaviour".[9]

In 2010, an article in Scientific American acknowledged that dogs are considerably better at using social direction cues (e.g. pointing by humans) than are chimpanzees.[10] In the same year, Towner wrote, "the issue may have evolved beyond whether or not there is theory of mind in non-human primates to a more sophisticated appreciation that the concept of mind has many facets and some of these may exist in non-human primates while others may not."[5] Horowitz, working with dogs, agreed.[11]

In 2013, Whiten reviewed the literature and concluded that regarding the question "Are chimpanzees truly mentalists, like we are?", he stated he could not offer an affirmative or negative answer.[8] A similarly equivocal view was stated in 2014 by Brauer, who suggested that many previous experiments on ToM could be explained by the animals possessing other abilities. They went on further to make reference to several authors who suggest it is pointless to ask a "yes or no" question, rather, it makes more sense to ask which psychological states animals understand and to what extent.[12] At the same time, it was suggested that a "minimal theory of mind" may be "what enables those with limited cognitive resources or little conceptual sophistication, such as infants, chimpanzees, scrub-jays and human adults under load, to track others' perceptions, knowledge states and beliefs."[13]

In 2015, Cecilia Heyes, Professor of Psychology at the University of Oxford, wrote about research on ToM, "Since that time [2000], many enthusiasts have become sceptics, empirical methods have become more limited, and it is no longer clear what research on animal mindreading is trying to find" and "However, after some 35 years of research on mindreading in animals, there is still nothing resembling a consensus about whether any animal can ascribe any mental state" (Heyes' emphasis). Heyes further suggested that "In combination with the use of inanimate control stimuli, species that are unlikely to be capable of mindreading, and the 'goggles method' [see below], these approaches could restore both vigour and rigour to research on animal mindreading."[1]

Methods edit

Specific categories of behaviour are sometimes used as evidence of animal ToM, including imitation, self-recognition, social relationships, deception, role-taking (empathy), perspective-taking, teaching and co-operation,[5] however, this approach has been criticised.[6] Some researchers focus on animals' understanding of intention, gaze, perspective, or knowledge, i.e. what another being has seen. Several experimental methods have been developed which are widely used or suggested as appropriate tests for nonhuman animals possessing ToM. Some studies look at communication between individuals of the same species (intraspecific) whereas others investigate behaviour between individuals of different species (interspecific).

Knower-Guesser edit

The Knower-Guesser method has been used in many studies relating to animal ToM.[6]

Competitive feeding paradigm edit

The competitive feeding paradigm approach is considered by some as evidence that animals have some understanding of the relationship between "seeing" and "knowing".[1]

Goggles Method edit

In one suggested protocol, chimpanzees are given first-hand experience of wearing two mirrored visors. One of the visors is transparent whereas the other is not. The visors themselves are of markedly different colours or shapes. During the subsequent test session, the chimpanzees are given the opportunity to use their species-typical begging behaviour to request food from one of the two humans, one wearing the transparent visor and the other wearing the opaque. If chimpanzees possess ToM, it would be expected they would beg more often from the human wearing the transparent visor.

False Belief Test edit

A method used to test ToM in human children has been adapted for testing non-human animals. The basis of the test is to track the gaze of the animal. One human hides an object in view of a second human who then leaves the room. The object is then removed.[14]

In nonhuman primates edit

Many ToM studies have used nonhuman primates (NHPs). One study that examined the understanding of intention in orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus), chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and children showed that all three species understood the difference between accidental and intentional acts.[15]

Chimpanzees edit

There is controversy over the interpretation of evidence purporting to show ToM in chimpanzees.[16]

Attribution of perception edit

Chimpanzees were unable to follow a human's gaze to find food hidden under opaque bowls, but were able to do so when food was hidden in tubes that the experimenter was able to look into. This seems to suggest that chimpanzees can infer another individual's perception depending on the clarity of the mechanism through which the individual has gained that knowledge.[17]

Attempts to use the "Goggles Method" (see above) on highly human-enculturated chimpanzees failed to demonstrate they possess ToM.[9]

In contrast, chimpanzees use the gaze of other chimpanzees to gain information about whether food is accessible.[7] Subordinate chimpanzees are able to use the knowledge state of dominant chimpanzees to determine which container has hidden food.[18]

Attribution of intentions edit

Young chimpanzees were shown to reliably help researchers perform tasks that involved reaching (such as picking up dropped items that the researcher struggled to retrieve), without specific prompting. This suggests that these chimpanzees were able to understand the researcher's intentions in these cases and acted upon them.[19][20]

In a similar study, chimps were provided with a preference box with two compartments, one containing a picture of food, the other containing a picture of nothing. Neither were actually related to the contents of the box. In a foraging competition game, chimpanzees avoided the chamber with the picture of food when their competitor had chosen one of the chambers before them.[21][22]

Captive bonobos such as Kanzi have been reported to show concern for their handlers’ well-being.[23] Bonobos also console other bonobos who are victims of aggressive conflicts and reconcile after participating in these conflicts.[24] Both of these behaviors suggest some semblance of ToM through an attribution of mental states to another individual.

Attribution of False Belief edit

Chimpanzees have passed the False Belief Test (see above) involving anticipating the gaze of humans when objects have been removed. Infrared eye-tracking showed that the chimpanzee subjects’ gaze were focused on where the experimenter would falsely believe the object /subject to be, rather than focusing on its actual location of which the chimps were aware. This seems to suggest that the chimpanzees were capable of ascribing false belief to the experimenter.[25]

Evidence for ToM Present in Chimps? Present in Bonobos? References
Attribution to Perception/Knowledge
Using human gaze to find food hidden under opaque bowl No Call et al., 1998
Using human gaze to find food hidden in tube open to human Yes Call et al., 1998
Remembering what human had seen and inferring target of attention Yes Yes MacLean & Hare, 2012
Attribution to Intention
Helping humans retrieve objects when reaching Yes Warneken & Tomasello, 2008
Consoling victims of conflict and reconciling after participating in these conflicts Yes Clay & Waal, 2013
Attribution of False Belief
Anticipating that human will look in wrong location based on false belief Yes Yes Krupenye et al., 2016

Other primates edit

 
Rhesus macaques selectively steal grapes from humans who are incapable of seeing the grape compared to humans who can see the grape.

In one approach testing monkeys, rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) are able to "steal" a contested grape from one of two human competitors. In six experiments, the macaques selectively stole the grape from a human who was incapable of seeing the grape, rather than from the human who was visually aware.[26] Similarly, free ranging rhesus macaques preferentially choose to steal food items from locations where they can be less easily observed by humans, or where they will make less noise.[citation needed]

The authors also reported that at least one individual of each of the species showed (weak) evidence of ToM.[27]

In a multi-species study, it was shown that chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans passed the False Belief Test (see above).[25]

In 2009, a summary of the ToM research, particularly emphasising an extensive comparison of humans, chimpanzees and orang-utans,[28] concluded that great apes do not exhibit understanding of human referential intentions expressed in communicative gestures, such as pointing.[29]

In birds edit

Parrots edit

Grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus) have demonstrated high levels of intelligence. Irene Pepperberg did experiments with these and her most accomplished parrot, Alex, demonstrated behaviour which seemed to manipulate the trainer, possibly indicating theory of mind.[30]

Ravens edit

 
Ravens adjust their caching behaviour according to whether they have been watched and who was watching them.

Ravens are members of the family Corvidae and are widely regarded as having complex cognitive abilities.[31][32] Other studies indicate that ravens recall who was watching them during caching, but also know the effects of visual barriers on what competitors can and can not see, and how this affects their pilfering.[33]

Ravens have been tested for their understanding of "seeing" as a mental state in other ravens.[34] The researchers further suggested that their findings could be considered in terms of the "minimal" (as opposed to "full-blown") ToM recently suggested.[13]

Using the Knower-Guesser approach, ravens observing a human hiding food are capable of predicting the behaviour of bystander ravens that had been visible at both, none or just one of two baiting events. The visual field of the competitors was manipulated independently of the view of the test-raven.[35]

Scrub jays edit

 
Western scrub jays may show evidence of possessing theory of mind

Scrub jays are also corvids. Western scrub jays (Aphelocoma californica) both cache food and pilfer other scrub jays' caches. They use a range of tactics to minimise the possibility that their own caches will be pilfered. One of these tactics is to remember which individual scrub jay watched them during particular caching events and adjust their re-caching behaviour accordingly.[36] One study with particularly interesting results found that only scrub jays which had themselves pilfered would re-cache when they had been observed making the initial cache.[37] This has been interpreted as the re-caching bird projecting its own experiences of pilfering intent onto those of another potential pilferer, and taking appropriate action.[8][38]

In dogs edit

 
Dogs can use the pointing behaviour of humans to determine the location of food.

Domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) show an impressive ability to use the behaviour of humans to find food and toys using behaviours such as pointing and gazing. The performance of dogs in these studies is superior to that of NHPs,[39] however, some have stated categorically that dogs do not possess a human-like ToM.[12][40]

Similarly, dogs preferentially use the behaviour of the human Knower to indicate the location of food. This is unrelated to the sex or age of the dog. In another study, 14 of 15 dogs preferred the location indicated by the Knower on the first trial, whereas chimpanzees require approximately 100 trials to reliably exhibit the preference.[39][29]

In pigs edit

An experiment at the University of Bristol found that one out of ten pigs was possibly able to understand what other pigs can see. That pig observed another pig which had view of a maze in which food was being hidden, and trailed that pig through the maze to the food. The other pigs involved in the experiment did not.[41][42]

In goats edit

A 2006 study found that goats exhibited intricate social behaviours indicative of high-level cognitive processes, particularly in competitive situations. The study included an experiment in which a subordinate animal was allowed to choose between food that a dominant animal could also see and food that it could not; those who were subject to aggressive behaviour selected the food that the dominant animal could not see, suggesting that they are able to perceive a threat based on being within the dominant animal's view – in other words, visual perspective taking.[43]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Lurz, R.W. (2011). Mindreading Animals: The Debate Over What Animals Know About Other Minds. MIT Press.
  • Udell, M.A. & Wynne, C.D. (2011). "Reevaluating canine perspective-taking behavior". Learning & Behavior. 39 (4): 318–323. doi:10.3758/s13420-011-0043-5. PMID 21870213. S2CID 18428903.
  • Whiten, A. (1996). "When does behaviour-reading become mind-reading". In Caruthers P.; Smith P. K. (eds.). Theories of Theory of Mind. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 277–292.

theory, mind, animals, extension, human, animals, philosophical, psychological, concept, theory, mind, sometimes, known, mentalisation, mind, reading, involves, inquiry, into, whether, human, animals, have, ability, attribute, mental, states, such, intention, . Theory of mind in animals is an extension to non human animals of the philosophical and psychological concept of theory of mind ToM sometimes known as mentalisation or mind reading It involves an inquiry into whether non human animals have the ability to attribute mental states such as intention desires pretending knowledge to themselves and others including recognition that others have mental states that are different from their own 1 2 3 To investigate this issue experimentally researchers place non human animals in situations where their resulting behavior can be interpreted as supporting ToM or not The existence of theory of mind in non human animals is controversial On the one hand one hypothesis proposes that some non human animals have complex cognitive processes which allow them to attribute mental states to other individuals sometimes called mind reading while another proposes that non human animals lack these skills and depend on more simple learning processes such as associative learning 4 or in other words they are simply behaviour reading Several studies have been designed specifically to test whether non human animals possess theory of mind by using interspecific or intraspecific communication Several taxa have been tested including primates birds and canines Positive results have been found however these are often qualified as showing only low grade ToM or rejected as not convincing by other researchers Contents 1 History and development 2 Methods 2 1 Knower Guesser 2 2 Competitive feeding paradigm 2 3 Goggles Method 2 4 False Belief Test 3 In nonhuman primates 3 1 Chimpanzees 3 1 1 Attribution of perception 3 1 2 Attribution of intentions 3 1 3 Attribution of False Belief 3 2 Other primates 4 In birds 4 1 Parrots 4 2 Ravens 4 3 Scrub jays 5 In dogs 6 In pigs 7 In goats 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingHistory and development edit nbsp Much of the early work on ToM in animals focused on the understanding chimpanzees have of human knowledgeThe term theory of mind was originally proposed by Premack and Woodruff in 1978 2 5 Early studies focused almost entirely on studying if chimpanzees could understand the knowledge of humans This approach turned out not to be particularly fruitful and 20 years later Heyes reviewing all the extant data observed that there had been no substantial progress in the subject area 6 A 2000 paper 7 approached the issue differently by examining competitive foraging behaviour between primates of the same species conspecifics This led to the rather limited conclusion that chimpanzees know what conspecifics do and do not see 8 In 2007 Penn and Povinelli wrote there is still little consensus on whether or not nonhuman animals understand anything about unobservable mental states or even what it would mean for a non verbal animal to understand the concept of a mental state They went on further to suggest that ToM was any cognitive system whether theory like or not that predicts or explains the behaviour of another agent by postulating that unobservable inner states particular to the cognitive perspective of that agent causally modulate that agent s behaviour 9 In 2010 an article in Scientific American acknowledged that dogs are considerably better at using social direction cues e g pointing by humans than are chimpanzees 10 In the same year Towner wrote the issue may have evolved beyond whether or not there is theory of mind in non human primates to a more sophisticated appreciation that the concept of mind has many facets and some of these may exist in non human primates while others may not 5 Horowitz working with dogs agreed 11 In 2013 Whiten reviewed the literature and concluded that regarding the question Are chimpanzees truly mentalists like we are he stated he could not offer an affirmative or negative answer 8 A similarly equivocal view was stated in 2014 by Brauer who suggested that many previous experiments on ToM could be explained by the animals possessing other abilities They went on further to make reference to several authors who suggest it is pointless to ask a yes or no question rather it makes more sense to ask which psychological states animals understand and to what extent 12 At the same time it was suggested that a minimal theory of mind may be what enables those with limited cognitive resources or little conceptual sophistication such as infants chimpanzees scrub jays and human adults under load to track others perceptions knowledge states and beliefs 13 In 2015 Cecilia Heyes Professor of Psychology at the University of Oxford wrote about research on ToM Since that time 2000 many enthusiasts have become sceptics empirical methods have become more limited and it is no longer clear what research on animal mindreading is trying to find and However after some 35 years of research on mindreading in animals there is still nothing resembling a consensus about whether any animal can ascribe any mental state Heyes emphasis Heyes further suggested that In combination with the use of inanimate control stimuli species that are unlikely to be capable of mindreading and the goggles method see below these approaches could restore both vigour and rigour to research on animal mindreading 1 Methods editSpecific categories of behaviour are sometimes used as evidence of animal ToM including imitation self recognition social relationships deception role taking empathy perspective taking teaching and co operation 5 however this approach has been criticised 6 Some researchers focus on animals understanding of intention gaze perspective or knowledge i e what another being has seen Several experimental methods have been developed which are widely used or suggested as appropriate tests for nonhuman animals possessing ToM Some studies look at communication between individuals of the same species intraspecific whereas others investigate behaviour between individuals of different species interspecific Knower Guesser edit The Knower Guesser method has been used in many studies relating to animal ToM 6 Competitive feeding paradigm edit The competitive feeding paradigm approach is considered by some as evidence that animals have some understanding of the relationship between seeing and knowing 1 Goggles Method edit In one suggested protocol chimpanzees are given first hand experience of wearing two mirrored visors One of the visors is transparent whereas the other is not The visors themselves are of markedly different colours or shapes During the subsequent test session the chimpanzees are given the opportunity to use their species typical begging behaviour to request food from one of the two humans one wearing the transparent visor and the other wearing the opaque If chimpanzees possess ToM it would be expected they would beg more often from the human wearing the transparent visor False Belief Test edit A method used to test ToM in human children has been adapted for testing non human animals The basis of the test is to track the gaze of the animal One human hides an object in view of a second human who then leaves the room The object is then removed 14 In nonhuman primates editMany ToM studies have used nonhuman primates NHPs One study that examined the understanding of intention in orangutans Pongo pygmaeus chimpanzees Pan troglodytes and children showed that all three species understood the difference between accidental and intentional acts 15 Chimpanzees edit There is controversy over the interpretation of evidence purporting to show ToM in chimpanzees 16 Attribution of perception edit Chimpanzees were unable to follow a human s gaze to find food hidden under opaque bowls but were able to do so when food was hidden in tubes that the experimenter was able to look into This seems to suggest that chimpanzees can infer another individual s perception depending on the clarity of the mechanism through which the individual has gained that knowledge 17 Attempts to use the Goggles Method see above on highly human enculturated chimpanzees failed to demonstrate they possess ToM 9 In contrast chimpanzees use the gaze of other chimpanzees to gain information about whether food is accessible 7 Subordinate chimpanzees are able to use the knowledge state of dominant chimpanzees to determine which container has hidden food 18 Attribution of intentions edit Young chimpanzees were shown to reliably help researchers perform tasks that involved reaching such as picking up dropped items that the researcher struggled to retrieve without specific prompting This suggests that these chimpanzees were able to understand the researcher s intentions in these cases and acted upon them 19 20 In a similar study chimps were provided with a preference box with two compartments one containing a picture of food the other containing a picture of nothing Neither were actually related to the contents of the box In a foraging competition game chimpanzees avoided the chamber with the picture of food when their competitor had chosen one of the chambers before them 21 22 Captive bonobos such as Kanzi have been reported to show concern for their handlers well being 23 Bonobos also console other bonobos who are victims of aggressive conflicts and reconcile after participating in these conflicts 24 Both of these behaviors suggest some semblance of ToM through an attribution of mental states to another individual Attribution of False Belief edit Chimpanzees have passed the False Belief Test see above involving anticipating the gaze of humans when objects have been removed Infrared eye tracking showed that the chimpanzee subjects gaze were focused on where the experimenter would falsely believe the object subject to be rather than focusing on its actual location of which the chimps were aware This seems to suggest that the chimpanzees were capable of ascribing false belief to the experimenter 25 Evidence for ToM Present in Chimps Present in Bonobos ReferencesAttribution to Perception KnowledgeUsing human gaze to find food hidden under opaque bowl No Call et al 1998Using human gaze to find food hidden in tube open to human Yes Call et al 1998Remembering what human had seen and inferring target of attention Yes Yes MacLean amp Hare 2012Attribution to IntentionHelping humans retrieve objects when reaching Yes Warneken amp Tomasello 2008Consoling victims of conflict and reconciling after participating in these conflicts Yes Clay amp Waal 2013Attribution of False BeliefAnticipating that human will look in wrong location based on false belief Yes Yes Krupenye et al 2016Other primates edit nbsp Rhesus macaques selectively steal grapes from humans who are incapable of seeing the grape compared to humans who can see the grape In one approach testing monkeys rhesus macaques Macaca mulatta are able to steal a contested grape from one of two human competitors In six experiments the macaques selectively stole the grape from a human who was incapable of seeing the grape rather than from the human who was visually aware 26 Similarly free ranging rhesus macaques preferentially choose to steal food items from locations where they can be less easily observed by humans or where they will make less noise citation needed The authors also reported that at least one individual of each of the species showed weak evidence of ToM 27 In a multi species study it was shown that chimpanzees bonobos and orangutans passed the False Belief Test see above 25 In 2009 a summary of the ToM research particularly emphasising an extensive comparison of humans chimpanzees and orang utans 28 concluded that great apes do not exhibit understanding of human referential intentions expressed in communicative gestures such as pointing 29 In birds editParrots edit Grey parrots Psittacus erithacus have demonstrated high levels of intelligence Irene Pepperberg did experiments with these and her most accomplished parrot Alex demonstrated behaviour which seemed to manipulate the trainer possibly indicating theory of mind 30 Ravens edit nbsp Ravens adjust their caching behaviour according to whether they have been watched and who was watching them Ravens are members of the family Corvidae and are widely regarded as having complex cognitive abilities 31 32 Other studies indicate that ravens recall who was watching them during caching but also know the effects of visual barriers on what competitors can and can not see and how this affects their pilfering 33 Ravens have been tested for their understanding of seeing as a mental state in other ravens 34 The researchers further suggested that their findings could be considered in terms of the minimal as opposed to full blown ToM recently suggested 13 Using the Knower Guesser approach ravens observing a human hiding food are capable of predicting the behaviour of bystander ravens that had been visible at both none or just one of two baiting events The visual field of the competitors was manipulated independently of the view of the test raven 35 Scrub jays edit nbsp Western scrub jays may show evidence of possessing theory of mindScrub jays are also corvids Western scrub jays Aphelocoma californica both cache food and pilfer other scrub jays caches They use a range of tactics to minimise the possibility that their own caches will be pilfered One of these tactics is to remember which individual scrub jay watched them during particular caching events and adjust their re caching behaviour accordingly 36 One study with particularly interesting results found that only scrub jays which had themselves pilfered would re cache when they had been observed making the initial cache 37 This has been interpreted as the re caching bird projecting its own experiences of pilfering intent onto those of another potential pilferer and taking appropriate action 8 38 In dogs edit nbsp Dogs can use the pointing behaviour of humans to determine the location of food Domestic dogs Canis familiaris show an impressive ability to use the behaviour of humans to find food and toys using behaviours such as pointing and gazing The performance of dogs in these studies is superior to that of NHPs 39 however some have stated categorically that dogs do not possess a human like ToM 12 40 Similarly dogs preferentially use the behaviour of the human Knower to indicate the location of food This is unrelated to the sex or age of the dog In another study 14 of 15 dogs preferred the location indicated by the Knower on the first trial whereas chimpanzees require approximately 100 trials to reliably exhibit the preference 39 29 In pigs editAn experiment at the University of Bristol found that one out of ten pigs was possibly able to understand what other pigs can see That pig observed another pig which had view of a maze in which food was being hidden and trailed that pig through the maze to the food The other pigs involved in the experiment did not 41 42 In goats editA 2006 study found that goats exhibited intricate social behaviours indicative of high level cognitive processes particularly in competitive situations The study included an experiment in which a subordinate animal was allowed to choose between food that a dominant animal could also see and food that it could not those who were subject to aggressive behaviour selected the food that the dominant animal could not see suggesting that they are able to perceive a threat based on being within the dominant animal s view in other words visual perspective taking 43 See also editList of animals by number of neuronsReferences edit a b c Heyes C 2015 Animal mindreading what s the problem Psychonomic Bulletin amp Review 22 2 313 327 doi 10 3758 s13423 014 0704 4 PMID 25102928 S2CID 37581900 a b Premack D G amp Woodruff G 1978 Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 4 515 526 doi 10 1017 S0140525X00076512 Calarge C Andreasen N C amp O Leary D S 2003 Visualizing how one brain understands another a PET study of theory of mind American Journal of Psychiatry 160 11 1954 1964 doi 10 1176 appi ajp 160 11 1954 PMID 14594741 Elgier A M Jakovcevic A Mustaca A E amp Bentosela M 2012 Pointing following in dogs are simple or complex cognitive mechanisms involved Animal Cognition 15 6 1111 1119 doi 10 1007 s10071 012 0534 6 hdl 11336 67330 S2CID 12872446 a b c Towner S 2010 Concept of mind in non human primates Bioscience Horizons 3 1 96 104 doi 10 1093 biohorizons hzq011 a b c Heyes C M 1998 Theory of mind in nonhuman primates PDF Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 1 101 114 doi 10 1017 s0140525x98000703 PMID 10097012 S2CID 6469633 a b Hare B Call J Agnetta B Tomasello M 2000 Chimpanzees know what conspecifics do and do not see PDF Animal Behaviour 59 4 771 785 doi 10 1006 anbe 1999 1377 PMID 10792932 S2CID 3432209 a b c Whiten A 2013 Humans are not alone in computing how others see the world Animal Behaviour 86 2 213 221 doi 10 1016 j anbehav 2013 04 021 S2CID 53164765 a b Penn D C amp Povinelli D J 2007 On the lack of evidence that non human animals possess anything remotely resembling a theory of mind Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 362 1480 731 744 doi 10 1098 rstb 2006 2023 PMC 2346530 PMID 17264056 Jabr F June 8 2010 Clever critters Bonobos that share brainy bugs and social dogs Scientific American Retrieved April 18 2016 Horowitz A 2011 Theory of mind in dogs Examining method and concept Learning amp Behavior 39 4 314 317 doi 10 3758 s13420 011 0041 7 PMID 21789555 S2CID 15883460 a b Brauer J 2014 Chapter 10 What dogs understand about humans In Kaminski J Marshall Pescini S eds The Social Dog Behaviour and Cognition Academic Press pp 295 317 a b Butterfill S A amp Apperly I A 2013 How to construct a minimal theory of mind PDF Mind amp Language 28 5 606 637 doi 10 1111 mila 12036 Smith R A October 16 2016 Apes understand that some things are all in your head DukeToday Retrieved January 3 2017 Call J amp Tomasello M 1998 Distinguishing intentional from accidental actions in orangutans Pongo pygmaeus chimpanzees Pan troglodytes and human children Homo sapiens Journal of Comparative Psychology 112 2 192 206 doi 10 1037 0735 7036 112 2 192 PMID 9642787 Povinelli D J amp Vonk J 2003 Chimpanzee minds Suspiciously human Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 4 157 160 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 494 1478 doi 10 1016 S1364 6613 03 00053 6 PMID 12691763 S2CID 3473587 Call J Hare B amp Tomasello M 1998 Chimpanzee gaze following in an object choice task Animal Cognition 1 2 89 99 doi 10 1007 s100710050013 PMID 24399273 S2CID 13210426 Hare B Call J amp Tomasello M 2001 Do chimpanzees know what conspecifics know and do not know Animal Behaviour 61 1 139 151 doi 10 1006 anbe 2000 1518 PMID 11170704 S2CID 3402554 Warneken Felix Tomasello Michael 2006 03 03 Altruistic Helping in Human Infants and Young Chimpanzees Science 311 5765 1301 1303 Bibcode 2006Sci 311 1301W doi 10 1126 science 1121448 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 16513986 S2CID 1119115 Schmelz M Call J amp Tomasello M 2011 Chimpanzees know that others 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paradigm Evidence for perspective taking PDF Behaviour 143 11 1341 1356 doi 10 1163 156853906778987542 Further reading editLurz R W 2011 Mindreading Animals The Debate Over What Animals Know About Other Minds MIT Press Udell M A amp Wynne C D 2011 Reevaluating canine perspective taking behavior Learning amp Behavior 39 4 318 323 doi 10 3758 s13420 011 0043 5 PMID 21870213 S2CID 18428903 Whiten A 1996 When does behaviour reading become mind reading In Caruthers P Smith P K eds Theories of Theory of Mind New York NY Cambridge University Press pp 277 292 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theory of mind in animals amp oldid 1187954028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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