Abstract
Using the comparative approach, researchers draw inferences about the evolution of cognition. Psychologists have postulated several hypotheses to explain why certain species are cognitively more flexible than others, and these hypotheses assume that certain cognitive skills are linked together to create a generally “smart” species. However, empirical findings suggest that several animal species are highly specialized, showing exceptional skills in single cognitive domains while performing poorly in others. Although some cognitive skills may indeed overlap, we cannot a priori assume that they do across species. We argue that the term “cognition” has often been used by applying an anthropocentric viewpoint rather than a biocentric one. As a result, researchers tend to overrate cognitive skills that are human-like and assume that certain skills cluster together in other animals as they do in our own species. In this paper, we emphasize that specific physical and social environments create selection pressures that lead to the evolution of certain cognitive adaptations. Skills such as following the pointing gesture, tool-use, perspective-taking, or the ability to cooperate evolve independently from each other as a concrete result of specific selection pressures, and thus have appeared in distantly related species. Thus, there is not “one cognition”. Our argument is founded upon traditional Darwinian thinking, which—although always at the forefront of biology—has sometimes been neglected in animal cognition research. In accordance with the biocentric approach, we advocate a broader empirical perspective as we are convinced that to better understand animal minds, comparative researchers should focus much more on questions and experiments that are ecologically valid. We should investigate nonhuman cognition for its own sake, not only in comparison to the human model.
Highlights
Using the comparative approach, researchers draw inferences about the evolution of cognition
Psychologists have postulated several hypotheses to explain why certain species are cognitively more flexible than others, and these hypotheses assume that certain cognitive skills are linked together to create a generally “smart” species
Empirical findings suggest that several animal species are highly specialized, showing exceptional skills in single cognitive domains while performing poorly in others
Summary
Some of the most enduring questions in contemporary behavioral science concern which cognitive skills humans share with other animal species and which are uniquely human (Premack and Woodruff 1978; Byrne 1996; Tomasello 2019). The Technical Intelligence Hypothesis predicts that tool-use and sociality are linked by a shared ability for flexible action planning This brief survey of selected major hypotheses exemplifies the problematic assumption that “intelligence” results from a cluster of cognitive skills that are linked together and are elicited by single evolutionary conditions and factors that create a set of selection pressures. As interest in other minds shifted from humans to nonhuman species, methods of human psychology were often transferred to other animals This approach can only produce a restrictive, anthropocentric view of cognitive evolution that ignores the incredible diversity of cognitive skills present in the world (Bates and Byrne 2007). By eschewing the traditional anthropocentric approach and turning our attention to skills that humans either do not excel in or do not possess, we are better positioned to advance the science of animal cognition (Cantlon and Hayden 2017)
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