Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience

With the increase in research on age-related decline in human cognitive capabilities has come an increased demand for a nonhuman cognitive aging model that controls for confounds in the human research, including education, socio-economic class, and language abilities. A nonhuman primate model of co...

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Main Author: Kuhar, Christopher William
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/4840
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-48402013-01-07T20:10:45ZFactors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and ExperienceKuhar, Christopher WilliamMemoryGorillaZoosAgingDelayed responseWith the increase in research on age-related decline in human cognitive capabilities has come an increased demand for a nonhuman cognitive aging model that controls for confounds in the human research, including education, socio-economic class, and language abilities. A nonhuman primate model of cognitive aging is particularly attractive given the similarities in physiology and behavior between nonhuman primates and humans. The rhesus macaque has proven to be a highly effective model of human aging, but apes, the closest genetic relatives to humans, are virtually unstudied. Only three studies have examined age-related changes in cognitive abilities in apes, and all three studies were conducted using tasks that have had relatively little success in revealing age-related performance decline in monkeys. Sixteen gorillas housed at Zoo Atlanta and Disneys Animal Kingdom underwent five experiments to determine the effects of age, sex, and previous research experience on performance. Testing occurred in a modified Wisconsin General Test Apparatus using the delayed response paradigm. When delay intervals were increased from zero to 90 seconds performance decreased across all subjects. However, there was no univariate effect of age, sex, or experience on performance. Similarly, when the number of potential choice sites was increased from two to four there was a decrease in performance, but again there was no univariate effect of age, sex, or experience. However, older subjects were more likely to have a response bias and choose a single site across all tasks, irrespective of where the reward was located. This effect was more pronounced in inexperienced subjects. As a result, age does not appear to affect performance accuracy in the delayed response task in gorillas, but there may be an effect on response rigidity. Given the shortcomings of the delayed response task in simple cognitive studies with nonhuman primates, further research on cognitive aging in gorillas should utilize a research naïve population and use an experimental protocol that is titrated based on individual responses. This will allow the delay interval to be gradually increased to a point where age-related differences may be apparent.Georgia Institute of Technology2005-03-01T19:31:32Z2005-03-01T19:31:32Z2004-12-02Dissertation758051 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/4840en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Memory
Gorilla
Zoos
Aging
Delayed response
spellingShingle Memory
Gorilla
Zoos
Aging
Delayed response
Kuhar, Christopher William
Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience
description With the increase in research on age-related decline in human cognitive capabilities has come an increased demand for a nonhuman cognitive aging model that controls for confounds in the human research, including education, socio-economic class, and language abilities. A nonhuman primate model of cognitive aging is particularly attractive given the similarities in physiology and behavior between nonhuman primates and humans. The rhesus macaque has proven to be a highly effective model of human aging, but apes, the closest genetic relatives to humans, are virtually unstudied. Only three studies have examined age-related changes in cognitive abilities in apes, and all three studies were conducted using tasks that have had relatively little success in revealing age-related performance decline in monkeys. Sixteen gorillas housed at Zoo Atlanta and Disneys Animal Kingdom underwent five experiments to determine the effects of age, sex, and previous research experience on performance. Testing occurred in a modified Wisconsin General Test Apparatus using the delayed response paradigm. When delay intervals were increased from zero to 90 seconds performance decreased across all subjects. However, there was no univariate effect of age, sex, or experience on performance. Similarly, when the number of potential choice sites was increased from two to four there was a decrease in performance, but again there was no univariate effect of age, sex, or experience. However, older subjects were more likely to have a response bias and choose a single site across all tasks, irrespective of where the reward was located. This effect was more pronounced in inexperienced subjects. As a result, age does not appear to affect performance accuracy in the delayed response task in gorillas, but there may be an effect on response rigidity. Given the shortcomings of the delayed response task in simple cognitive studies with nonhuman primates, further research on cognitive aging in gorillas should utilize a research naïve population and use an experimental protocol that is titrated based on individual responses. This will allow the delay interval to be gradually increased to a point where age-related differences may be apparent.
author Kuhar, Christopher William
author_facet Kuhar, Christopher William
author_sort Kuhar, Christopher William
title Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience
title_short Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience
title_full Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience
title_fullStr Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience
title_full_unstemmed Factors Affecting Spatial Abilities of Captive Western Lowland Gorillas: Age, Gender, and Experience
title_sort factors affecting spatial abilities of captive western lowland gorillas: age, gender, and experience
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/4840
work_keys_str_mv AT kuharchristopherwilliam factorsaffectingspatialabilitiesofcaptivewesternlowlandgorillasagegenderandexperience
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