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Cognition
- Characteristics of certain types of brain processes that lie between incoming sensory information and the execution of behavior
- These processes underlie capacities such as anticipation of the future, insight, ability to extrapolate from data, frustration etc.
- Sometimes associated with consciousness
- Concept of self
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Cognitive Understanding
- Animal welfare concerns are based on the assumption that non-human animals can subjectively experience emotional (affective) states and hence can suffer or experience pleasure.
- Accurate assessment of animal emotions (affect) is an important goal in animal welfare research
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Indicators of Emotions
- Emotional arousal: emotional intensity or how activated the animal is
- HPA
- Heart rate
- Behavioral responses
- Emotional valence: whether the emotional state is positive or negative. This is critical to welfare
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Cognitive Bias
- Cognitive processes influence and are influenced by an individuals emotional state
- Information processing, attention, learning, memory and decision making
- Reliable indicator of emotional valence
- Not evidence that animal consciously experience such states (same as behavior and physiology)
- Affective state alters cognition
- More positive emotional state is associated with increased likelihood of judging ambiguous information positively (optimistic cognitive bias) more negative emotional state results in the opposite (pessimistic cognitive bias)
- Animals more optimistic cognitive bias, ie. more positive emotional state, in enriched environments.
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How do we measure emotion?
- "Cognitive bias": the influence of emotion on cognition
- -based on the concept that depressed humans interpret ambiguous stimuli negatively
- Judgment bias tasks: behaviors showing the anticipation of a positive or negative event in a response to ambiguous stimuli
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Why understand motivation?
- Identify and alleviate the sources of some important frustration-related welfare problems
- Reveal why abnormal activities like stereotypic behaviors are so common in captive animals
- Improve training methods, manipulate mating and maternal care
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Motivation
- Causal explanation of behavior
- Proximate, mechanistic explanation of why an animal is performing a particular behavior pattern
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What motivation is
- Motivation is the process within the brain controlling which behaviors and physiological changes occur and when
- Motivation involves goals, actions, behavior sequences, homeostasis, drive and perhaps feelings and emotions
- A concept used to understand the variability of behavior
- A concept used to explain decision making. What well the animal do next when faced with choices
- Why animals sometimes respond to stimuli and sometimes ignore them
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Black box approach
- Not understanding the precise physiological mechanisms
- Allows for simple modelling
- Sometime mechanism is helpful (sow nest building)
- Neuroscience and motivation see
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Some motivate behaviors
- Feeding (hunger)
- Drinking (thirst)
- Thermoregulation
- Sex
- Aggression
- Defense
- Exploration
- Migration
- Foraging
- nest-building
- Incubation
- Social interaction
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Motivational state and causal factors
- Causal factors
- -inputs to decision making center
- -some factors may be irrelevant
- -factors may change slowly (hormonal) or rapidly (environmental)
- Various stimuli
- Behavioral change = manifestation of change in causal factors
- Motivational state: combination of all levels of all causal factors
- Combined physiological and perceptual state of an animal, as represented in its brain
- Models demonstrate 2 factors only in reality there are numerous factors and one must consider a multi-dimensional state
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Motivational strength
- The probability of performing a given behavior and the frequency, or vigour, with which it is performed
- eg. the more hungry the rat is:
- the more likely it is to feed,
- the more rapidly is will eat
- the greater the quantity it will consume
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What motivation does
- 1. Changes responsiveness to a constant (internal or external) stimulus
- 2. Facilitates goal-directed behavior
- 3. Potentiates some species-typical behaviors
- 4. Facilitates decision making
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Homeostatic systems
- Some motivations are concerned with regulating the body's internal state (feeding, drinking, thermoregulation)
- The regulation of a variable within narrow limits is called homeostasis
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Homeostatic mechanisms
- Negative feedback (if internal variable goes above or below the optimal, deviation is detected and corrected)
- Feeforward (the animal anticipates departures of an internal variable from its optimal value and pre-empts them)
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Non-homeostatic systems
Some motivations do not regulate the body's internal state, but have more strategic objectives (reproduction, defense of resources)
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Sexual motivation in female rhesus monkeys
- Sexual motivation fluctuates during the oestrus cycle, peaking at the start of ovulation
- Blood concentrations of oestrogen and testosterone peak just before the start of ovulation and may be responsible for increased motivation
- Injection of these hormones increases sexual motivation
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Internal and external stimuli
- Internal - hormones, etc
- External - environment (flavor of food, season changing, time of day, smell of food, presence of predators)
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Learned associations
- External stimuli can acquire or lose the ability to motivate behavior through learning
- -food that makes sick, fish learning to fight by signalling light...
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Facilitating goal-directed behavior
- In a complex environment, many behaviors need to be flexible
- In many cases, motivation does not activate a fixed response, but activates behavior towards a goal
- It is said to be goal-directed or purposive
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Potentiating species-typical behaviors
- Some responses are hard-wired and always take the same form (sexually aroused female rat)
- Appetitive behavior, active, searching flexible behavior
- Consummatory Behavior, more sterotyped, unlearnt; species typical
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Facilitating decision making
- In a complex environment, an animal has many things it needs to do
- It can't satisfy all these motivations at once
- It must decide which behavior to perform when and for how long
- ie. Incubating vs feeding in hens & thermoregulation vs feeding in desert lizards
- These motivations interact, and factors are involved that involve switching between motivations: the relative strength of the motivations and the cost of swithing
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Why motivation?
- Poor welfare due to unfulfilled motivations
- Evolution has shaped animals so that the most important behaviors are most highly motivated
- Animals will suffer when highly motivated behaviors are prevented
- Frustration
- Measuring motivation is possible with demand experiments
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Do motivation to address
- Poor welfare due to unfulfilled motivations
- Understanding stereotypic behavior
- Learning and training
- Promote species typical behavior
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