Litcius/Paper detail

The ecological significance of time sense in animals

Leslie Ng, Jair E. García, Adrian G. Dyer, Devi Stuart‐Fox

2020Biological reviews/Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Time is a fundamental dimension of all biological events and it is often assumed that animals have the capacity to track the duration of experienced events (known as interval timing). Animals can potentially use temporal information as a cue during foraging, communication, predator avoidance, or navigation. Interval timing has been traditionally investigated in controlled laboratory conditions but its ecological relevance in natural environments remains unclear. While animals may time events in artificial and highly controlled conditions, they may not necessarily use temporal information in natural environments where they have access to other cues that may have more relevance than temporal information. Herein we critically evaluate the ecological contexts where interval timing has been suggested to provide adaptive value for animals. We further discuss attributes of interval timing that are rarely considered in controlled laboratory studies. Finally, we encourage consideration of ecological relevance when designing future interval-timing studies and propose future directions for such experiments.

Topics & Concepts

Relevance (law)ForagingInterval (graph theory)Duration (music)Natural (archaeology)EcologyAdaptive valueComputer scienceInterval temporal logicTemporal scalesBiologyArtificial intelligenceMathematicsCombinatoricsLiteratureLawArtDescription logicPolitical sciencePaleontologyAnimal Vocal Communication and BehaviorNeuroscience and Music PerceptionAnimal Behavior and Reproduction