Litcius/Paper detail

Wild cognition – linking form and function of cognitive abilities within a natural context

Birgit Szabo, Anyelet Valencia‐Aguilar, Isabel Damas‐Moreira, Eva Ringler

2022Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Interest in studying cognitive ecology has moved the field of animal cognition into the wild. Animals face many challenges such as finding food and other resources, avoiding and deterring predators and choosing the best mate to increase their reproductive success. To solve these dilemmas, animals need to rely on a range of cognitive abilities. Studying cognition in natural settings is a powerful approach revealing the link between adaptive form and biological function. Recent technological and analytical advances opened up completely new opportunities and research directions for studying animal cognition. Such innovative studies were able to disclose the variety in cognitive processes that animals use to survive and reproduce. Cognition indeed plays a major role in the daily lives of wild animals, in which the integration of many different types of information using a diverse range of cognitive processes enhances fitness.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionContext (archaeology)Animal cognitionFunction (biology)Cognitive scienceFace (sociological concept)Natural (archaeology)PsychologyVariety (cybernetics)Cognitive psychologyEcologyBiologyComputer scienceNeuroscienceEvolutionary biologySociologyArtificial intelligencePaleontologySocial scienceAnimal Behavior and ReproductionBat Biology and Ecology StudiesSpecies Distribution and Climate Change