Dear All,
Just a reminder about our seminar today. Today at 4pm, Gloria Sabbatini (Unit of Cognitive
Primatology, Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, CNR, Rome, Italy) will be
talking about tool use in capuchin monkeys. Please, see below the title and short abstract
for her talk.
This meeting will be online (link below).
Action planning and tool use in capuchin monkeys (Sapajus sp.)
The study of how animals anticipate future actions is crucial to understand cognitive
processes that guide behavior. The capacity to alter object manipulation not only on the
basis of the immediate task demands but also of the next task to be performed involves
second-order motor planning abilities . This response dependency is instantiated in the
end-state comfort (ESC) effect, the capability of grasping an object in a way that
enhances hand comfort and object control while performing the next action. Research using
different tasks has reported evidence of the ESC effect in a number of nonhuman primate
species, including capuchin monkeys. Several factors are supposed to affect the strength
of the expression of second-order motor planning abilities. In this talk I will present
work on action planning in capuchin monkeys in which factors such as direction of the task
(self-directed or externally directed), initial object orientation, number of object
functional ends, manual preference and age were investigated. These data on capuchins add
to the literature concerning object grasping and manipulation in nonhuman primates and
encourage the use of grasping tasks to study motor planning and to compare cognition
processes across primates.
Best,
Gema
Link to the online meetings:
https://teams.microsoft.com/dl/launcher/launcher.html?url=%2F_%23%2Fl%2Fmee…
________________________________
Scotland's University for Sporting Excellence
The University of Stirling is a charity registered in Scotland, number SC 011159