Tool Use and Causal Cognition
Teresa McCormack, Christoph Hoerl, and Stephen Butterfill
Abstract
What cognitive abilities underpin the use of tools, and how are tools and their properties represented or understood by tool-users? Does the study of tool use provide us with a unique or distinctive source of information about the causal cognition of tool-users? Tool use is a topic of major interest to all those interested in animal cognition, because it implies that the animal has knowledge of the relationship between objects and their effects. There are countless examples of animals developing tools to achieve some goal — chimps sharpening sticks to use as spears, bonobos using sticks to fis ... More
What cognitive abilities underpin the use of tools, and how are tools and their properties represented or understood by tool-users? Does the study of tool use provide us with a unique or distinctive source of information about the causal cognition of tool-users? Tool use is a topic of major interest to all those interested in animal cognition, because it implies that the animal has knowledge of the relationship between objects and their effects. There are countless examples of animals developing tools to achieve some goal — chimps sharpening sticks to use as spears, bonobos using sticks to fish for termites, and New Caledonian crows developing complex tools to extracts insects from logs. Studies of tool use have been used to examine an exceptionally wide range of aspects of cognition, such as planning, problem-solving and insight, naive physics, and social relationship between action and perception. A key debate in recent research on animal cognition concerns the level of cognitive sophistication that is implied by animal tool use, and developmental psychologists have been addressing related questions regarding the processes through which children acquire the ability to use tools. In neuropsychology, patterns of impairments in tool use due to brain damage, and studies of neural changes associated with tool use, have also led to debates about the different types of cognitive abilities that might underpin tool use, and about how tool use may change the way space or the body is represented.
Keywords:
tools,
tool-users,
animal cognition,
animals,
problem-solving,
planning,
action,
perception,
tool use
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2011 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199571154 |
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199571154.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Teresa McCormack, editor
Professor of Developmental Psychology, Queen's University Belfast, UK
Christoph Hoerl, editor
Associate Professor (Reader) in Philosophy, University of Warwick, UK
Stephen Butterfill, editor
Associate Professor in Philosophy, University of Warwick, UK
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