The evolution of primate short-term memory

ManyPrimates
Aguenounoun, Géraud
Allritz, Matthias
Altschul, Drew M.
Ballesta, Sébastien
Beaud, Alice
Bohn, Manuel
Bornbusch, Sally L.
Brandão, Angela
Brooks, James
Bugnyar, Thomas
Burkart, Judith M.
Bustamante, Léa
Call, Josep
Canteloup, Charlotte
Cao, Chuangshi
Caspar, Kai R.
Silva, Diana da
Sousa, Alexandra A. de
DeTroy, Sarah E.
Duguid, Shona
Eppley, Timothy M.
Fichtel, Claudia
Fischer, Julia
Gong, Chi
Grange, James A.
Grebe, Nicholas M.
Hanus, Daniel
Haus, Daniel
Haux, Lou M.
Héjja-Brichard, Yseult
Helman, Annabella
Hernadi, Istvan
 Hermann, Esther
Hopper, Lydia M.
Howard, Lauren H.
Huang, Lei
Huskisson, Sarah M.
Jacobs, Ivo
Jin, Zhiyong
Joly, Marine
Kani, Fumihiro
Keupp, Stefanie
Kiefer, Evelin
Knakker, Balázs
Kóczán, Katalin
Kraus, Larissa
Kwok, Sze Chai
Lefrançois, Marie
Lewis, Laura
Liu, Siyi
Lonsdorf, Elizabeth
Loyant, Louise
Majecka, Katarzyna
Maurits, Luke
Meunier, Hélène
Mobili, Flávia
Morino, Luca
Motes Rodrigo, Alba
Nijman, Vincent
Ihomi, Caroline Nkov
Persson, Tomas
Pietraszewski, Dariusz
Roig, Anthony
Sánchez-Amaro, Alejandro
Sato, Yutaro
Sauciuc, Gabriela-Alina
Schrock, Allie E.
Schweinfurth, Manon K.
Seed, Amanda
Shearer, Caroline L.
Šlipogor, Vedrana
Su, Yanjie
Sutherland, Kirsten
Tan, Jingzhi
Taylor, Derry
Troisi, Camille A.
Völter, Christoph J.
Warren, Elizabeth
Watzek, Julia
Zablocki-Thomas, Pauline
Share
Short-term memory is implicated in a range of cognitive abilities and is critical for understanding primate cognitive evolution. To investigate the effects of phylogeny, ecology and sociality on short-term memory, we tested the largest and most diverse primate sample to date (421 non-human primates across 41 species) in an experimental delayed-response task. Our results confirm previous findings that longer delays decrease memory performance across species and taxa. Our analyses demonstrate a considerable contribution of phylogeny over ecological and social factors on the distribution of short-term memory performance in primates; closely related species had more similar short-term memory abilities. Overall, individuals in the branch of Hominoidea performed better compared to Cercopithecoidea, who in turn performed above Platyrrhini and Strepsirrhini. Interdependencies between phylogeny and socioecology of a given species presented an obstacle to disentangling the effects of each of these factors on the evolution of short-term memory capacity. However, this study offers an important step forward in understanding the interspecies and individual variation in short-term memory ability by providing the first phylogenetic reconstruction of this trait's evolutionary history. The dataset constitutes a unique resource for studying the evolution of primate cognition and the role of short-term memory in other cognitive abilities ​
This document is licensed under a Creative Commons:Attribution (by) Creative Commons by3.0