National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Cognitive abilities in reptiles: individual learning ability vs. interspecies comparison
Víšková, Linda ; Landová, Eva (advisor) ; Kverková, Kristina (referee)
The cognitive abilities of "reptiles" have long been a neglected topic compared to research on cognition in two other groups of tetrapods - mammals and birds. Recently, however, studies testing selected aspects of various cognitive abilities in "reptiles" have become quite abundant. In this thesis, the different types of cognitive tasks studied were determined (focusing on numerical abilities, spatial learning, reversal learning, visual discrimination, social learning, "problem-solving" or operant conditioning) and then the methods of testing them in "reptiles" were discussed in detail. Subsequently, within the paraphyletic group "reptiles", the given cognitive abilities for each family (and specific species) were mapped with respect to their phylogeny. A general problem in some studies was the smaller number of subjects tested (minimum 1, maximum 559, median 15) relative to the often great number of factors studied (minimum 1, maximum 14, median 4) and the wide interindividual variability in cognitive performance. Although the amount of work on the cognitive abilities of "reptiles" has been rising over the last decade, qualitative analysis suggests the presence of simpler types of cognition. A quantitative or phylogenetic analysis of "reptilian" cognitive abilities has so far been precluded by low...
Numerical competence in animals
Kolbábková, Denisa ; Landová, Eva (advisor) ; Lindová, Jitka (referee)
Numerical competence is a cognitive ability, which enables using number or determining quantity. It contains not only counting, but also lower cognitive abilities such as summation or relative numerousness. Not only people, but also many animals can use knowledge about quantity in some way. This competence is common crosswise the whole animal kingdom, from invertebrate animals (ants or honeybees), across amphibians and fish to birds and mammals. This bachelor's thesis summarizes the research of numerical competence up to nowadays, it describes also different designs of individual tasks and compares the abilities of animals and people. Based on the evolution of numerical competence of mankind is evident that numerical competence has developed progressively and its difficulness increases. In order the previous I postulate a hypothesis that this difficultness could reflect in a phylogeny. In the end of this thesis thus I am devoted to a phylogenetic reconstruction estimate of the ancestral character status in mammals (primates) and I test wheather ecological factors such as the sociality degree and the food extraction progressed simultaneously with the numerical competence. Keywords: numerical competence, summation, relative and absolute numerousness judgement, ordinality, transitivity, conservation...

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