Which animals have desires?

Following are two tables summarizing findings about the distribution of some very basic learning capacities in the animal kingdom. These capacities seem relevant to possession of desires insofar as it seems implausible to attribute conscious planning to organisms which lack the capacities in question.

The summary is based on Martin Bitterman's pioneering research summarized in "The Evolution of Intelligence," Scientific American 212 (1965), pp. 92-100, coupled with a review of subsequent research.

For a full account of the cited evidence, see Gary Varner, In Nature's Interests? Interests, Animal Rights and Environmental Ethics (Oxford University Press, 1998), chapter two, "Localizing Desire."


Here are descriptions of the learning strategies covered:


Bitterman's findings:


MULTIPLE REVERSAL

PROBABILITY LEARNING

no progressive
adjustment
fish matching
progressive

adjustment


herpetofauna
*

birds
**
maximizing
mammals
systematic
matching
***
Notes:
    * Herps (reptiles and amphibians) exhibit progressive adjustment on spatial problems (those in which the location of presented objects is salient) but not on visual problems (those in which the shape or color of presented objects is salient).

    **Birds maximize on spatial problems but not on visual problems.

    ***Only primates systematically avoid the previously rewarded alternative. Other mammals' systematic matching consists in selecting the previously rewarded alternative.


Parallels between the above behavioral comparisons and associated physiological differences:

BEHAVIOR PHYSIOLOGY
none fish none
progressive adjustment
in multiple reversal trials
first emerges
reptiles this capacity is localized
in the cerebral cortex, which
first emerges here
maximizing in probability
learning situations first emerges
birds this and the previous capacity
are localized in the hyperstriatum,
which is present only here
systematic matching in
probability learning situations
first emerges
mammals this and the previous capacities are
localized in the prefrontal cortex,
which is present only here


© 1998 Gary E. Varner
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