Information‑seeking across auditory scenes by an echolocating dolphin
Fecha
2022Autor
Harley, Heidi E.
Fellner, Wendi
Frances, Candice
Thomas, Amber
Losch, Barbara
Newton, Katherine
Feuerbach, David
Metadatos
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Harley HE, Fellner W, Frances C, Thomas A, Losch B, Newton K, Feuerbach D. Information-seeking across auditory scenes by an echolocating dolphin. Anim Cogn. 2022 Oct;25(5):1109-1131. doi: 10.1007/s10071-022-01679-5. Epub 2022 Aug 26. PMID: 36018473.
Animal Cognition
Animal Cognition
Resumen
Dolphins gain information through echolocation, a publicly accessible sensory system in which dolphins produce clicks
and process returning echoes, thereby both investigating and contributing to auditory scenes. How their knowledge of these
scenes contributes to their echoic information-seeking is unclear. Here, we investigate their top–down cognitive processes
in an echoic matching-to-sample task in which targets and auditory scenes vary in their decipherability and shift from being
completely unfamiliar to familiar. A blind-folded adult male dolphin investigated a target sample positioned in front of a
hydrophone to allow recording of clicks, a measure of information-seeking and effort; the dolphin received fish for choosing
an object identical to the sample from 3 alternatives. We presented 20 three-object sets, unfamiliar in the first five 18-trial
sessions with each set. Performance accuracy and click counts varied widely across sets. Click counts of the four lowestperformance-
accuracy/low-discriminability sets (X = 41%) and the four highest-performance-accuracy/high-discriminability
sets (X = 91%) were similar at the first sessions’ starts and then decreased for both kinds of scenes, although the decrease was
substantially greater for low-discriminability sets. In four challenging-but-doable sets, number of clicks remained relatively
steady across the 5 sessions. Reduced echoic effort with low-discriminability sets was not due to overall motivation: the
differential relationship between click number and object-set discriminability was maintained when difficult and easy trials
were interleaved and when objects from originally difficult scenes were grouped with more discriminable objects. These
data suggest that dolphins calibrate their echoic information-seeking effort based on their knowledge and expectations of
auditory scenes.