2011年3月2日星期三

雌性和雄性在学习上存在性别差异

一项对长臂猿的研究发现,雌性在学习使用工具上面比较谨慎,而雄性显得粗心大意。研究人员让长臂猿使用耙状工具从障碍后面获取食物。在测试前未有工具使用经验的雌性长臂猿需要花费更长时间,才能用工具去成功取回食物,而在测试前有过工具使用经验的雄性,其成功率并不高。研究人员认为,这揭示了雄性和雌性在进化上的性别差异。对雌性而言,新的东西有潜在风险,尤其是对于怀孕或照顾年幼婴儿的雌性,它们在进化中养成了谨慎的习惯;而对雄性而言,它们生活中没有“生育成本”,因此没有进化出谨慎习惯。研究人员认为这一发现也许能适用于人类。blackhat 发表于 2011年3月02日 18时24分 星期三 
(PhysOrg.com) -- Differences in the way male and female learning has evolved have been revealed by new research into gibbons, conducted by the University of Abertay Dundee.
Female  benefited significantly from having access to a tool before being tested on using the tool to retrieve food. However, the males showed no beneficial learning effects at all.
The researchers believe that the potential dangers of new objects or new situations to females – particularly if they are pregnant or caring for young infants – have given an evolutionary advantage to being cautious. Male gibbons, who lack the same ‘reproductive costs’, by contrast seem to have evolved no such caution.
Dr Clare Cunningham, a psychology lecturer at Abertay University who led the research, said: “This result was a genuine surprise to us, as we’d not expected such a large difference with the females who had the learning opportunity before we conducted the test.
“We found that female gibbons who had no experience of the tool before being tested took almost three times as long to successfully use the tool to retrieve food from behind a barrier.”
The researchers also discovered that having access to the rake-like tool before testing did not increase the likelihood of success.
Interestingly, the male gibbons who had previous experience of the tool actually took much longer during the test to approach the tool and try to retrieve the tool, suggesting that males are less interested in objects they have previously experienced.
Clare added: “We believe that female gibbons who are more cautious to new objects and new situations may have an evolutionary advantage, resulting in a greater likelihood of survival and their cautious dispositions being passed on to the next generation.
“The research is very exciting, as it opens up a whole range of new questions for us to consider. For instance, have other species – like humans – also evolved with this same sex difference to ? If so, this could be a very important study indeed.”
The research was conducted at the Gibbon Conservation Centre in Santa Clarita, California, which works to ensure the survival of this endangered ape through conservation and scientific research.
The research is published online in the journal Animal Cognition, and is forthcoming in print.
Provided by University of Abertay Dundee

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