DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
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Kura-kura
menguasai teknologi touchscreen
Kura-kura
telah belajar bagaimana menggunakan touchscreens sebagai bagian dari studi yang
bertujuan untuk mengajarkan hewan teknik navigasi . Struktur otak reptil ini
sangat berbeda dari mamalia, yang menggunakan hippocampus untuk navigasi
spasial.................
Tortoises master touchscreen technology
Date:
August 6,
2014
Source:
University of Lincoln
Summary:
Tortoises have learned how to use touchscreens as part
of a study which aimed to teach the animals navigational techniques. The brain
structure of reptiles is very different to that of mammals, which use the
hippocampus for spatial navigation.
....................................
Tortoises have learned how to use touchscreens as part of a
study which aimed to teach the animals navigational techniques.
The research,
which was led by Dr Anna Wilkinson, from the School of Life Sciences, involved
red-footed tortoises, which are native to Central and South America. The brain
structure of reptiles is very different to that of mammals, which use the
hippocampus for spatial navigation.
Instead, it
is thought that the reptilian medial cortex serves as a homologue, however very
little behavioural work has actually examined this. To understand how tortoises
learn to navigate around their environment, the researchers tested how the
reptiles relied on cues to get around.
Dr Wilkinson
said: "Tortoises are perfect to study as they are considered largely
unchanged from when they roamed the world millions of years ago. And this
research is important so we can better understand the evolution of the brain
and the evolution of cognition."
Dr Wilkinson
carried out the initial training while at the University of Vienna, giving the
tortoises treats such as strawberries when the reptiles looked at, approached
and then pecked blue circles on the screen.
Two of the
tortoises, Esme and Quinn, went on to apply their knowledge to a real-life
situation.
The
researchers placed them in an arena with two empty food bowls that looked like
the blue circles on the touchscreen. The tortoises went to the bowl on the same
side as the circles they were trained to peck on the screen.
Dr Wilkinson
explained: "Their task was to simply remember where they had been
rewarded, learning a simple response pattern on the touchscreen. They then
transferred what they had learned from the touchscreen into a real-world
situation. This tells us that when navigating in real space they do not rely on
simple motor feedback but learn about the position of stimuli within an
environment.
"The
big problem is how to ask all animals a question that they are equally capable
of answering. The touchscreen is a brilliant solution as all animals can
interact with it, whether it is with a paw, nose or beak. This allows us to
compare the different cognitive capabilities."
Story Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Lincoln. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Julia Mueller-Paul, Anna Wilkinson, Ulrike Aust, Michael Steurer, Geoffrey Hall, Ludwig Huber. Touchscreen performance and knowledge transfer in the red-footed tortoise (Chelonoidis carbonaria). Behavioural Processes, 2014; 106: 187 DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2014.06.003
