性二态性
新颖性
认知
动物认知
情感(语言学)
性别选择
心理学
性别特征
任务(项目管理)
发展心理学
生物
认知心理学
生态学
动物
沟通
社会心理学
神经科学
管理
经济
内分泌学
作者
Samara Danel,Nancy Rebout,Francesco Bonadonna,Dora Biro
标识
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2024.2277
摘要
A wide range of animals, including a number of bird, fish, mammal and reptile species, show sex differences in cognitive tests. Hardly anything is known, however, about whether and how sex-specific non-cognitive factors (e.g. response to novelty) affect the expression of cognition in the wild. We used a series of learning and problem-solving tasks in wild breeding skuas, a species in which females are the larger sex (female-biased sexual size dimorphism). We also evaluated the birds’ response to novelty (novel objects) before and after the tasks were administered. Both sexes performed equally well in learning ( Discrimination-learning task ) and re-learning ( Reversal-learning task ) food associations with colour and spatial cues, but female skuas outperformed males in problem-solving tasks ( String-pulling task , Box-opening task ). Females were also less neophobic than males: they were faster at accepting a food reward in novel situations. Better female performance may not imply higher cognition per se . Sex-specific size differences may translate into less or more neophobic behavioural types, which, in turn, predict females’ problem-solving success and response to novelty. Species with female-biased sexual dimorphism may present a useful model to assess the interactions between sex, non-cognitive factors and cognition in the wild.
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