Abstract

The current study tested six Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) on a means-end behavioral task of pulling a support to retrieve a distant object; a systematic replication of the Irie-Sugimoto et al. (2008) study. The paradigm was somewhat modified from the original research to accommodate a protected contact setting, reduce the total number of trials, and one condition was excluded. Each elephant was tested on three conditions of increasing difficulty. Specifically, subjects were asked to select from a choice of two trays where one intact tray was baited with a highly-valued produce item and the other was A) empty; B) baited adjacent to the tray; and C) baited on the far side of a break in the tray. Results indicated that the elephants met or exceeded the criteria established for conditions A and B, but performed at chance levels on condition C. These data are contrasted with those of the original study where one elephant met criteria for all three conditions. We discuss potentially relevant variables affecting performance including differences in visual access to the trays, motivation levels, and training style.

Highlights

  • Title Performance on a Means End Task by Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) in a Positive Reinforcement-Based Protected Contact Setting

  • For the current study we chose to systematically replicate a study examining the performance of Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) on a means-end task (Irie-Sugimoto, Kobayashi, Sato, & Hasegawa, 2008)

  • Similar tasks have been used to study the ability of non-human animals to understand means-end relationships

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Summary

Introduction

Title Performance on a Means End Task by Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) in a Positive Reinforcement-Based Protected Contact Setting. Performance on a Means-End Task by Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) in a Positive Reinforcement-Based Protected-Contact Setting. The current study tested six Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) on a means-end behavioral task of pulling a support to retrieve a distant object; a systematic replication of the Irie-Sugimoto, Kobayashi, Sato, and Hasegawa (2008) study. For the current study we chose to systematically replicate a study examining the performance of Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) on a means-end task (Irie-Sugimoto, Kobayashi, Sato, & Hasegawa, 2008). Irie-Sugimoto and colleagues (2008) tested two female Asian elephants on four conditions (A: Baited vs Empty, B: ON-OFF, C: Transfer, and D: Disconnected) One of their subjects was able to complete all four conditions, and both subjects needed a fairly large number of trials to reach criterion levels. The authors concluded that the study needed to be completed with more elephants before solid conclusions could be drawn

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