Journal
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue -, Pages 87-113Publisher
ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.psych.60.110707.163526
Keywords
theory of mind; object-choice task; mental attribution; cooperation; competition; relationship intelligence
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Funding
- Royal Society University Research Fellowship
- BBSRC
- Royal Society
- University of Cambridge
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Theory of mind is said to be uniquely human. Is this statement justified? Thirty years of research on a variety of species has produced differences in opinion, from unequivocal positive evidence to no evidence at all for mental attribution in animals. Our review concludes that animals are excellent ethologists, but on the whole, poor psychologists. Those studies that we believe present a good case for mental attribution all possess high ecological validity, including studies on food competition by chimpanzees and cache-protection strategies by corvids. Even though the current focus of research on prediction rather food explanation may be misplaced, we believe the field is now in a strong position to discover what animals really know about their fellow beings, be it based on simple associations, behavior reading, mind reading, or something else.
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