Vonk, J., & MacDonald, S. E. (2002).
Natural concepts in a juvenile gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) at three levels of abstraction.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
78, 315-332.
The extent to which nonhumans are able to form conceptual versus
perceptual discriminations remains a matter of debate. Among the
great apes, only chimpanzees have been tested for conceptual
understanding, defined as the ability to form discriminations not
based solely on simple perceptual features of stimuli, and to
transfer this learning to novel stimuli. In the present
investigation, a young captive female gorilla was trained at
three levels of abstraction (concrete, intermediate, and
abstract) involving sets of photographs representing natural
categories (e.g., orangutans vs. humans, primates vs. nonprimate
animals, animals vs. foods). Within each level of abstraction,
when the gorilla had learned to discriminate positive from negative
exemplars in one set of photographs, a novel set was introduced.
Transfer was defined in terms of high accuracy during the first
two sessions with the new stimuli. The gorilla acquired
discriminations at all three levels of abstraction but showed
unambiguous transfer only with the concrete and abstract stimulus
sets. Detailed analyses of response patterns revealed little
evidence of control by simple stimulus features. Acquisition and
transfer involving abstract stimulus sets suggest a conceptual
basis for gorilla categorization. The gorilla's relatively poor
performance with intermediate-level discriminations parallels
findings with pigeons, and suggests a need to reconsider the role
of perceptual information in discriminations thought to indicate
conceptual behavior in nonhumans.
Key words: natural concepts, levels of abstraction, touch screen,
gorilla