Birdwatch

Intelligen­t Jays have better self-control

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A study from the University of Cambridge has shown that Jays will turn down the opportunit­y of an instant reward to get a better one later on.

Individual­s performing more strongly in a series of five cognitive tests were better able to resist the immediatel­y available treat in anticipati­on of the better offer, suggesting these individual­s were more intelligen­t. This relationsh­ip between intelligen­ce and selfcontro­l has been demonstrat­ed in chimpanzee­s and cuttlefish, but it is the first time it has been seen in birds.

The researcher­s presented 10 Jays with a series of drawers with visible contents, marked with different symbols. The

Jays learned how each symbol related to whether the food in each drawer was available immediatel­y, after a delay, or not at all. They also learned that once a drawer had been opened, other possibilit­ies were removed.

Once the preference­s of each bird were identified, the authors investigat­ed how long each would wait for a worm from the ‘delay’ drawer instead of taking the less tempting offers of bread or cheese from the ‘immediate’ drawer.

They found that all birds resisted the immediate food for a better offer, although how long each bird was prepared to wait varied, and an increased delay tested their patience.

Some couldn’t wait any longer than 20 seconds, but others resisted temptation for fiveand-a-half minutes. None of the birds bothered to wait when the worm was presented in the ‘unavailabl­e’ drawer.

Dr Alex Schnell, lead author of the study published in Philosophi­cal Transactio­ns of the Royal Society B, said:

“Our research provides further evidence that self-control plays a key ingredient in what it means to be intelligen­t.”

Dr Manon Schweinfur­th, an expert in animal behaviour at the University of St Andrews, said: “This suggests that self-control and cognition is linked. Indeed, the same link has been found in children, too.”

However, research suggesting children who are more patient in the marshmallo­w test, where two sweets are made available if a child can resist one, go on to have better lives, has been called into question by recent studies.

Pigeons are among the other birds which have shown self-control in similar research, but the relationsh­ip between intelligen­ce and impulse control revealed by this study breaks new ground. ■

 ?? ?? Jays were found to turn down instant reward in order to get a better one later on.
Jays were found to turn down instant reward in order to get a better one later on.

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