Periodic Reporting for period 1 - ImpExpPrimates (Comparison of implicit and explicit learning abilities in human adults, children, apes and monkeys)
Período documentado: 2022-02-01 hasta 2024-01-31
Understanding the relationship between learning and consciousness in humans and other species is a crucial step towards understanding consciousness, a fascinating property of the mind that we can all experience. Specifically, studying its evolutionary history offers a window into other species’ minds. This kind of research is not just a scientific pursuit; it has an ethical perspective: the more we understand animals’ mental lives, the better we can adjust our individual and collective behaviours towards them. In addition, this research allows us to better understand learning, with implications for pedagogy in schools (see last section for an example).
The objectives of the project were: (1) to develop entirely non-verbal versions of classical tests used to probe implicit/explicit learning; (2) to test the dissociation between implicit and explicit learning in four non-human primate species: capuchin monkeys (Sapajus sp.), Guinea baboons (Papio papio), orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus), and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes); (3) to retrace the ontogeny of implicit and explicit learning during childhood; (4) to uncover new behavioural markers of implicit/explicit learning and (5) to set up touchscreen-based research in a zoo for testing non-human primates and children.
This project opened the avenue for studying the phylogeny and ontogeny of implicit and explicit learning, enhancing our understanding of the relationships between learning and consciousness in nonverbal or preverbal individuals.
In a second study, we conducted a large-scale, multi-site study that allowed us to use the nonverbal task we developed to test three nonhuman primate species: baboons, orang-utans, and chimpanzees (Malassis et al., in prep). In a third study, we developed another task requiring less training for testing capuchin monkeys (Moscado, Seed, Sackur & Malassis, in prep.). In a fourth study, we developed a technique to track primates’ hand movements while they are performing a task (Martin, Allritz, Sackur & Malassis, in prep.). Finally, my fellowship allowed me to set up a new data collection site. We have designed and installed a touchscreen apparatus in a zoo and are training the apes to use it (Malassis et al., in prep.).