UGA Logo Office of Public Affairs Public Affairs 2
News Service UGA home link
Search link
Contact Us
UGA NEWS Service
News Release
Last Updated: Sep 23rd, 2009 - 16:32:23
Search




For releases prior to July 2003

UGA News Bureau

Top News Storiesmore...
In the Newsmore...
Master Calendarmore...
Advisoriesmore...
All News Releasesmore...
Columnsmore...
Faculty/staff newspaper
News from Schools & Colleges more...
Media Resources
Campaign and election experts more...
Back to School Features more...
Media contacts more...
Experts directory more...
e-Newsmore...
Put UGA's top stories on your sitemore...
Special Reports

Latest budget information

Arch News - August 7, 2009
Response to Board of Regents request for UGA budget plan

Arch News - July 22, 2009
Budget update

University of Georgia President Michael F. Adams gave a budget update to the UGA community during the April 23 meeting of the University Council at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center and Hotel. A video presentation and talking points are available for viewing.

Arch News - April 22, 2009
Upcoming budget presentation

Arch News - April 10, 2009
Status of the FY10 state budget

UGA president provides budget update
University of Georgia President Michael F. Adams gave members of University Council an update on UGA’s budget Thursday, Dec. 4 in wake of recent actions by the University System of Georgia Board of Regents to help meet an anticipated directive from state officials to increase the budget cut to 8 percent from the current 6 percent.
View December 4, 2008 Budget Update

Public forum on University Budget
On Wednesday, Sept. 17, President Michael F. Adams and other senior university officials delivered a presentation about the impact of current economic challenges and responded to questions from the audience. Links to archived video of the first budget forum on Sept. 5.
View September 1, 2008 forum online →
View September 5, 2008 forum online →
President's talking points [pdf] →
UGA Fiscal Update [ppt] →

Information on the April 25 off-campus shooting more...
Information on the national outbreak of H1N1 virus (commonly known as swine flu) more...
President's speeches more...
UGA's Master Plan more...
The UGA Century more...
40th Anniversary of
UGA's Desegregation more...
UGA Responds: 9/11 more...
Featured Research more...
Commencement Addresses more...
ARCHE Reports more...
University System of Georgia
news publications
Legislative Updates more...
The System Supplement more...
Value-Added USG Serves Georgiamore...
A Worthy Investmentmore...
UGA Open Records
Request procedure, form and FAQsmore...
The Office of the Attorney General of Georgiamore...
The Georgia Secretary of State Open Recordsmore...
The Georgia First Amendment Foundationmore...
Contact UGA Open Records Managermore...

Research shows that rats are capable of reflecting on their own mental processes; first time ever shown for a non-primate species, opens new areas of study
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Jonathon Crystal, 706/542-2174, jcrystal@uga.edu
Mar 8, 2007, 14:32

Email this article
Printer friendly page

Athens, Ga. – Let’s say a college student enters a classroom to take a test. The student probably already has an idea how he or she will do—knowledge available before actually taking out a pencil. But do animals possess the same ability to think about what they know or don’t know?

A new study by researchers from the University of Georgia, just published in the journal Current Biology, shows that laboratory rats do. It’s the first demonstration that any non-primate knows when it doesn’t know something, and it could open the way to more in-depth studies about how animals—and humans—think.

“This kind of research may change how we think about cognition and memory in animals,” said Jonathon Crystal, an associate professor of psychology in UGA’s Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

Crystal’s co-author on the paper is Allison Foote, a graduate student in the department of psychology at UGA.

Researchers have believed for some time that people and non-human primates are capable of “metacognition”—reasoning or thinking about one’s own thinking. There have been studies on birds about this kind of thinking process, but results thus far have been inconclusive. The new study is the first that shows a non-primate species has metacognition—a proposal that may well be controversial.

The study involved what is called a “duration-discrimination” test—offering rats rewards for classifying a signal as either short or long. As in most such tests, the “right” answer led to a large food reward, while a “wrong” answer led to no reward at all. The twist, however, is that before taking the duration test, the rats were given the chance to decline the test completely. If they made that choice, they got a small reward anyway.

“If rats have knowledge about whether they know or don’t know the answer to the test, we would expect them to decline most frequently on difficult tests,” said Crystal. “They would also show the lowest accuracy on difficult tests that they can’t decline. Our data showed both to be true, suggesting the rats have knowledge of their own cognitive states.”

It’s easy to find out when humans believe they know or don’t know the answer to a task or test. You just ask them. With non-verbal animals, it is necessary to used experimental conditions in which a subject can demonstrate knowledge of a cognitive state through its behavior.

The tests asked the rats to discriminate among a number of responses. Sometimes, the choices were relatively easy, and the rats were able to make a choice that generated a large reward. But often, the choices were quite difficult, and the animals faced a dilemma: Should they continue and take a chance on the test with the risk of no food reward, or should they just bail out and take the small, but guaranteed reward?

One part of the problem, for example, was presenting the rats with a sound and asking them to determine if it was “short” or “long.” When the sounds were near the extremes of either end, discriminating was easy. But for sounds with durations in the mid-range, the rats found it extremely hard to know if they were “short” or “long.” So what should they do: Guess and possibly be wrong, or simply refuse to take the test and get a small reward?

“Our research showed that the rats know when they don’t know the answer to a question,” said Crystal.

The results of the just-published study present a dilemma for those who had previously believed that only primates could achieve metacognition. But it also presents a rodent model that should allow researchers to understand better what animals are “cognitively sophisticated” and why.

The research will also open new lines of inquiry about the underlying neural mechanisms of this ability. Reflecting on one’s own mental experiences is a defining feature of human existence, and the demonstration of metacognition in rats suggests that this type of cognition may be widespread among animals. Does it mean, for example, that rats are “conscious,” and could that also be true of other non-primates?

The research was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health.

##

Note to editors: For a copy of the article, contact Crystal at 706/542-2174 or jcrystal@uga.edu. Photography is available by contacting Phil Williams at 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu.




Top of Page


Today is Sunday, November 8, 2009 10:26 PM EST

UGA Today is produced by the UGA News Service, a unit of UGA Public Affairs.
Hodgson Oil Building, Suite 200N
286 Oconee Street
Athens, GA  30602-1999
Phone 706/542-8083 • Fax 706/542-3939
Questions, comments and suggestions should be directed to news@uga.edu


UGA Home | External Affairs | Columns | Georgia Magazine
Publications / UGA Identity Materials | Broadcast and Video | Photographic Services
UGA Athletics | UGA Events | Visitors Center | Admissions | Directories | Search