Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

The comparative psychology of uncertainty monitoring and metacognition

  • University of Montana
  • Georgia State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

296 Scopus citations

Abstract

Researchers have begun to explore animals' capacities for uncertainty monitoring and metacognition. This exploration could extend the study of animal self-awareness and establish the relationship of self-awareness to other-awareness. It could sharpen descriptions of metacognition in the human literature and suggest the earliest roots of metacognition in human development. We summarize research on uncertainty monitoring by humans, monkeys, and a dolphin within perceptual and metamemory tasks. We extend phylogenetically the search for metacognitive capacities by considering studies that have tested less cognitively sophisticated species. By using the same uncertainty-monitoring paradigms across species, it should be possible to map the phylogenetic distribution of metacognition and illuminate the emergence of mind. We provide a unifying formal description of animals' performances and examine the optimality of their decisional strategies. Finally, we interpret animals' and humans' nearly identical performances psychologically. Low-level, stimulus-based accounts cannot explain the phenomena. The results suggest granting animals a higher-level decision-making process that involves criterion setting using controlled cognitive processes. This conclusion raises the difficult question of animal consciousness. The results show that animals have functional features of or parallels to human conscious cognition. Remaining questions are whether animals also have the phenomenal features that are the feeling/knowing states of hunan conscious cognition, and whether the present paradigms can be extended to demonstrate that they do. Thus, the comparative study of metacognition potentially grounds the systematic study of animal consciousness.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)317-339
Number of pages23
JournalBehavioral and Brain Sciences
Volume26
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2003

Keywords

  • Cognition
  • Comparative cognition
  • Consciousness
  • Memory monitoring
  • Metacognition
  • Metamemory
  • Self-awareness
  • Uncertainty
  • Uncertainty monitoring

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The comparative psychology of uncertainty monitoring and metacognition'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this