Rats appear to reflect on their own cognition
Worse, in my immediate familyUnderpants? wrote: Oh you have one of those high-pitched, high-strung neurotic, big-eared pieces of white shit in your extended family too, eh?

You've summed the little cunt up nicely

He does my fucking head in, chasing and biting your feet/trousers when you leave the room, knows perfectly well not to piss indoors but does it anyway, barks at anything remotely unfamiliar, alternatively barks and then squeaks if you ignore him.
He's lucky he's lived this long.
I use to raise and feed mice to my snakes. I could tell from watching them that some knew they were fucked and it scared the shit out of them. Others would just walk all over, totally unaware until they got hit. I always pulled the ones that were aware out of the cage and made them pets. Snakes do need to eat, so it has to be done, but there is no way I'm going allow something to be that afraid when I can help.
I was thinking about this on the walk to work today. How does this reasearch point to rats reflecting on their own abilities rather than just being an indicator of them being able to judge their success/failure rate on a strictly reactive basis?
What I mean is there's a distinction between 'I will not be able to do that because I am not capable' and 'I will not attempt this because its a lot of work and from past experience does not pay out well'.
What I mean is there's a distinction between 'I will not be able to do that because I am not capable' and 'I will not attempt this because its a lot of work and from past experience does not pay out well'.
"Maybe you have some bird ideas. Maybe that’s the best you can do."
― Terry A. Davis
― Terry A. Davis
Yes, it's a survival instinct. Humans possess it too - it's the classic fight or flight decision.Tsakali_ wrote:why does prey try to run in the presence of a predator? under what category of explanation does that fall under? is it merely natural instinct for the propagation of the species? utilizing self awareness seems like a good way for nature to insure survival
The fact that they realize that it will be a lot of work suggests they know if they are capable. The rats were still willing to work for it if they knew the test was easy, so they're making some distinction between what they can and cannot accomplish based on their intelligence.Foo wrote:I was thinking about this on the walk to work today. How does this reasearch point to rats reflecting on their own abilities rather than just being an indicator of them being able to judge their success/failure rate on a strictly reactive basis?
What I mean is there's a distinction between 'I will not be able to do that because I am not capable' and 'I will not attempt this because its a lot of work and from past experience does not pay out well'.
I'm still just seeing that an individual rat is capable of judging a test to be easy or hard... which doesn't imply that they're conscious of the notion of it being easy to them but hard to another rat, or vice versa... and if they can't weigh their ability against another rat in some manner, then I don't see how the rat can be said to be aware of its personal ability, which seems to be the implication here.werldhed wrote:The fact that they realize that it will be a lot of work suggests they know if they are capable. The rats were still willing to work for it if they knew the test was easy, so they're making some distinction between what they can and cannot accomplish based on their intelligence.Foo wrote:I was thinking about this on the walk to work today. How does this reasearch point to rats reflecting on their own abilities rather than just being an indicator of them being able to judge their success/failure rate on a strictly reactive basis?
What I mean is there's a distinction between 'I will not be able to do that because I am not capable' and 'I will not attempt this because its a lot of work and from past experience does not pay out well'.
This doesn't logically imply to me that the animal understands its own capabilities, or can weigh their abilities against any other rat, but merely that an individual rat can weight the probability of success in a task which is has previously experienced... which I don't think is a new piece of information... we already know rats are capable of learning.
I dunno... either I'm missing something or it's being made out to be something that it isn't...