Dear all,
the Leibniz ScienceCampus Primate Cognition invites you to a talk in our lecture series on Jan 21st, 2020 at 1 p.m.:
Ways of Thinking. From Crows to Children and Back Again
Nicola S Clayton (University of Cambridge)
This talk reviews some of the recent work on the remarkable cognitive capacities of food-caching corvids. The focus will be on their ability to think about other minds and other times, and tool-using tests of physical problem solving. Research on developmental cognition suggests that young children do not pass similar tests until they are at least four years of age in the case of the social cognition experiments, and eight years of age in the case of the tasks that tap into physical cognition. This developmental trajectory seems surprising. Intuitively, one might have thought that the social and planning tasks required more complex forms of cognitive process, namely Mental Time Travel and Theory of Mind. Future research will hope to identify these cognitive milestones by starting to develop tasks that might go some way towards understanding the mechanisms underlying these abilities in both children and corvids, to explore similarities and differences in their ways of thinking and how this might further our understanding of the evolution of cognition.
The lecture series will be held online via zoom; to join the meeting:
https://dpz-eu.zoom.us/j/99170648089?pwd=cjB0S01JM0llOUR5NXF5RGhnTG40Zz09
Meeting-ID: 991 7064 8089
Kenncode: 699373
To compensate for the lack of meeting the speaker personally, we plan to provide the opportunity for a few 1:1 discussions right after the talk. If you are interested to chat with Nicky, please send an email to britta.schuenemann@uni-goettingen.de and cschloegl@dpz.eu
With best regards
Britta Schünemann
Christian Schloegl
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