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タイトル: | Great apes use self-experience to anticipate an agent's action in a false-belief test |
著者: | Kano, Fumihiro Krupenye, Christopher Hirata, Satoshi ![]() ![]() ![]() Tomonaga, Masaki Call, Josep |
著者名の別形: | 狩野, 文浩 平田, 聡 友永, 雅己 |
キーワード: | anticipatory looking behavior rule goggles test nonhuman animals theory of mind |
発行日: | 15-Oct-2019 |
出版者: | National Academy of Science |
誌名: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) |
巻: | 116 |
号: | 42 |
開始ページ: | 20904 |
終了ページ: | 20909 |
抄録: | Human social life depends on theory of mind, the ability to attribute mental states to oneself and others. A signature of theory of mind, false belief understanding, requires representing others' views of the world, even when they conflict with one's own. After decades of research, it remains controversial whether any nonhuman species possess a theory of mind. One challenge to positive evidence of animal theory of mind, the behavior-rule account, holds that animals solve such tasks by responding to others' behavioral cues rather than their mental states. We distinguish these hypotheses by implementing a version of the “goggles” test, which asks whether, in the absence of any additional behavioral cues, animals can use their own self-experience of a novel barrier being translucent or opaque to determine whether another agent can see through the same barrier. We incorporated this paradigm into an established anticipatory-looking false-belief test for great apes. In a between-subjects design, apes experienced a novel barrier as either translucent or opaque, although both looked identical from afar. While being eye tracked, all apes then watched a video in which an actor saw an object hidden under 1 of 2 identical boxes. The actor then scuttled behind the novel barrier, at which point the object was relocated and then removed. Only apes who experienced the barrier as opaque visually anticipated that the actor would mistakenly search for the object in its previous location. Great apes, therefore, appeared to attribute differential visual access based specifically on their own past perceptual experience to anticipate an agent's actions in a false-belief test. |
記述: | 類人猿が他者の行動を予測するのに自己経験を用いることを発見 --トリック目隠しと動物の認知--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2019-10-01. |
著作権等: | © 2019. Published under the PNAS license. The full-text file will be made open to the public on April 15, 2020 in accordance with publisher's 'Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving'. This is not the published version. Please cite only the published version. この論文は出版社版でありません。引用の際には出版社版をご確認ご利用ください。 |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2433/294735 |
DOI(出版社版): | 10.1073/pnas.1910095116 |
PubMed ID: | 31570582 |
関連リンク: | https://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/ja/research-news/2019-10-01 |
出現コレクション: | 学術雑誌掲載論文等 |

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