Title of article
Apes are intuitive statisticians
Author/Authors
Rakoczy، نويسنده , , Hannes and Clüver، نويسنده , , Annette and Saucke، نويسنده , , Liane and Stoffregen، نويسنده , , Nicole and Grنbener، نويسنده , , Alice and Migura، نويسنده , , Judith and Call، نويسنده , , Josep، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
9
From page
60
To page
68
Abstract
Inductive learning and reasoning, as we use it both in everyday life and in science, is characterized by flexible inferences based on statistical information: inferences from populations to samples and vice versa. Many forms of such statistical reasoning have been found to develop late in human ontogeny, depending on formal education and language, and to be fragile even in adults. New revolutionary research, however, suggests that even preverbal human infants make use of intuitive statistics. Here, we conducted the first investigation of such intuitive statistical reasoning with non-human primates. In a series of 7 experiments, Bonobos, Chimpanzees, Gorillas and Orangutans drew flexible statistical inferences from populations to samples. These inferences, furthermore, were truly based on statistical information regarding the relative frequency distributions in a population, and not on absolute frequencies. Intuitive statistics in its most basic form is thus an evolutionarily more ancient rather than a uniquely human capacity.
Keywords
Primate cognition , Intuitive statistics , Numerical cognition , Comparative psychology
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078007
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