Courtesy of Mysterious Uinverse - here's a study that is claimed to show that monkeys show more cognitive flexibility than humans. Both were taught a task that required picking three geometrical shapes in succession. But when the rules were changed so that they could just pick the final one and still receive a reward, all the monkeys adapted while most of the humans didn't. That was when the humans were American undergraduates - American children and members of a semi-nomadic Namibian tribe showed more adaptibility than the undergraduates, but not as much as the monkeys:
Press release:
https://news.gsu.edu/2019/10/14/monkeys-...gn=monkeys
Paper:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-49658-0
I haven't read the paper, but some things in the press release puzzle me, and I wonder whether the study is really measuring what they claim. In particular, I don't understand why "70 percent of all the monkeys used the shortcut the very first time it was available compared to only one human." How can acting in accordance with the new rules the very first time be anything to do with learning or flexibility? Doesn't it just mean that 70% of the monkeys had failed to learn or had forgotten the old rules?
Press release:
https://news.gsu.edu/2019/10/14/monkeys-...gn=monkeys
Paper:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-49658-0
I haven't read the paper, but some things in the press release puzzle me, and I wonder whether the study is really measuring what they claim. In particular, I don't understand why "70 percent of all the monkeys used the shortcut the very first time it was available compared to only one human." How can acting in accordance with the new rules the very first time be anything to do with learning or flexibility? Doesn't it just mean that 70% of the monkeys had failed to learn or had forgotten the old rules?