Human and animal cognition: Continuity and discontinuity
Top Cited Papers
- 28 August 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (35) , 13861-13867
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0706147104
Abstract
Microscopic study of the human brain has revealed neural structures, enhanced wiring, and forms of connectivity among nerve cells not found in any animal, challenging the view that the human brain is simply an enlarged chimpanzee brain. On the other hand, cognitive studies have found animals to have abilities once thought unique to the human. This suggests a disparity between brain and mind. The suggestion is misleading. Cognitive research has not kept pace with neural research. Neural findings are based on microscopic study of the brain and are primarily cellular. Because cognition cannot be studied microscopically, we need to refine the study of cognition by using a different approach. In examining claims of similarity between animals and humans, one must ask: What are the dissimilarities? This approach prevents confusing similarity with equivalence. We follow this approach in examining eight cognitive cases—teaching, short-term memory, causal reasoning, planning, deception, transitive inference, theory of mind, and language—and find, in all cases, that similarities between animal and human abilities are small, dissimilarities large. There is no disparity between brain and mind.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ecology, Domain Specificity, and the Origins of Theory of Mind: Is Competition the Catalyst?Philosophy Compass, 2006
- Recursive syntactic pattern learning by songbirdsNature, 2006
- Anticipation of Future Events in Squirrel Monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) and Rats (Rattus norvegicus): Tests of the Bischof-Kohler Hypothesis.Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2006
- Is Language the Key to Human Intelligence?Science, 2004
- Infants Attribute Value± to the Goal-Directed Actions of Self-propelled ObjectsJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1997
- The infant's theory of self-propelled objectsCognition, 1990
- “Gavagai!” or the future history of the animal language controversyCognition, 1985
- Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind?Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1978
- The Evolution of Reciprocal AltruismThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1971
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964