Title
Fast mapping in hominids
Authors
Wilson, Vanessa
German Primate Center, The University of Edinburgh, University of Aberdeen, Université de Neuchâtel Institut de Biologie
Pascual Guardia, Carla
Skoruppa, Katrin
Abstract
Fast mapping is essential when children acquire language, but whether the required cognition is uniquely human or shared with animals is debated. Although documented in dogs and cats, both species have a history of domestication of social cognition, so that it remains unclear whether fast mapping is naturally present in non-domesticated animals. Here, we used an eye-tracking paradigm to test three species of hominids – gorillas, orangutans and humans – in their ability to rapidly learn to associate novel sounds with objects in their everyday noisy environment. The task was difficult for all participants, but while adult humans showed evidence of fast mapping, we could not detect any sign of learning in the other hominids. These species differences could have trivial causes, such as problems with attention or motivation, but it is also possible that fast mapping requires a preexisting lexicon before becoming an effective learning mechanism, or that it has simply evolved after the shared ancestor of all great apes.
Description
This repository contains the eyetracking data and stimuli pictures from the "Fast mapping in hominids" journal paper, and a README file.
- ape_clean.csv: cleaned eyetracking data for the Basel zoo apes
- human_clean.csv: cleaned eyetracking data for the Neuchâtel human participants
- picturecollection.zip: pictures of stimuli used for the eye tracking experiment
- ape_clean.csv: cleaned eyetracking data for the Basel zoo apes
- human_clean.csv: cleaned eyetracking data for the Neuchâtel human participants
- picturecollection.zip: pictures of stimuli used for the eye tracking experiment
Date of Issue
2026-01-06
Subject Keywords
Fast mapping Word learning Language evolution Comparative cognition Language acquisition Meaning Mental representation
Discipline
Social sciences::Psychology
Humanities::Languages and Literature::Linguistics
Contact person
Linked publications
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10071-025-01974-x
Publication(DOI)
License
Open Access
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/99814
