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Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews
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Relational Spatial Reasoning by a Nonhuman: The Example of Capuchin Monkeys

Dorothy M. Fragaszy

Department of Psychology, University of Georgia

Sarah E. Cummins-Sebree

Behavioral Sciences Department, Raymond Walters College, University of Cincinnati

The authors review spontaneous manipulation and spatial problem solving by capuchin monkeys to illuminate the nature of relational reasoning (wherein two or more elements of a problem or situation are considered together to arrive at a course of action) that these monkeys use in goal-directed activity. Capuchin monkeys master problems with one, two, or three spatial relations, and if more than one relation, at least two relations may be managed concurrently. They can master static and dynamic relations and, with sufficient practice, can produce specific spatial relations through both direct and distal action. Examining capuchins' spatial problem-solving behavior with objects in the framework of a spatial relational reasoning model leads to new interpretations of previous studies with these monkeys and other nonhuman animals. The model produces a variety of testable predictions concerning the contribution of relational properties to spatial reasoning. It also provides conceptual linkages with neurological processes and cognitive analyses of physical reasoning. Understanding relational spatial reasoning, including tool use, in a wider view is vital to informed, principled comparison of problem solving and the use of technology across species, across ages within species, and across eras in human prehistory.

Key Words: spatial reasoning • problem solving • cognition • Cebus apella

Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews, Vol. 4, No. 4, 282-306 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/1534582306286573


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