机经真题 8 Passage 2

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Tool Use by Capuchin Monkeys

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Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting the THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some sentences do not belong in the summary because they express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. This question is worth 2 points. Drag your choices to the spaces where they belong. To review the passage, select View Passage.

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Capuchin monkeys often use tools in captive settings but there is little evidence that they use tools in the wild.

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正确答案: B C E
  • A.
    Capuchins are so well-adapted to arboreal life that it is just as easy for them to perform certain actions on a sloping branch as it is for terrestrial monkeys to perform the same actions on solid ground.
  • B.
    Wild capuchins' arboreal lifestyle may limit their opportunities to use tools, but studies of other primates show that arboreality alone does not prevent tool use.
  • C.
    Given certain freedoms and protections in captivity, capuchins investigate by pounding, rubbing, and inserting objects, enabling them to discover that using an object can help them reach a goal.
  • D.
    Capuchins have certain physical characteristics that are not found in apes, which partly explains why capuchins use tools more than chimpanzees and orangutans.
  • E.
    Captive capuchins use tools more than other monkeys that are physically well adapted for tool use because capuchins are socially supportive and are naturally curious about objects.
  • F.
    Because the use of tools requires fine manipulation skills, capuchins are less likely to learn to use tools in the wild, where it is more difficult for successful learning to take place.

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  • Capuchin monkeys are medium-size primates native to the forests of Central America and northern South America. Although these monkeys are impressive users of tools in captive settings, we have little evidence of their systematic use of tools when in the wild. Researchers have commented on this puzzling contrast by noting that capuchins have not been studied in the wild as extensively as other primates such as apes and that their more arboreal (tree-based) lifestyle limits their opportunities to use tools compared with apes. In the trees, their hands are more often needed for support; moreover, loose objects that could be used as tools are less available and less easily set aside and retrieved, and stable, strong and appropriately shaped supporting surfaces are less available in the trees than on the ground. Imagine pounding a round nut on a log or stone that rests solidly on the ground. Then imagine the same activity while sitting in a tree and pounding the nut on a sloping tree branch. Finally, activities carried out high in the forest canopy are more difficult for terrestrial humans to see than activities occurring on the ground.



    All of these are plausible explanations for the rarity of observations of tool use in wild capuchins. However, although arboreality may limit opportunities for capuchins to use tools or for us to observe such activity, we know that chimpanzees and orangutans do sometimes use tools in trees. Thus arboreality alone does not preclude tool use. Instead, we must consider what aspects of capuchins' behavior and ecology might support the discovery of how to use an object as a tool in the wild. This consideration might suggest other ways we can look for tool use in wild capuchins and help us to understand why we observe it more often in captive monkeys.



    One can turn the question around and ask why we see tool use at all in capuchin monkeys. Like other primates, capuchins possess the necessary sensory and anatomical characteristics for using objects as tools. They have a well-articulated hand with anatomical adaptations that favor the fine manipulation or precise positioning of objects, and they have sufficiently long limbs, postural control, and strength to generate considerable forces (when pounding for example). This, however, does not distinguish them from most other monkeys, especially those in Africa and Asia, although all other monkeys use tools less often than capuchins.



    Capuchins possess two behavioral characteristics that are less widely shared with other primates and that are particularly relevant to using objects as tools. First, although using a tool is an individual endeavor, it is acquired more readily in socially supportive contexts where experts tolerate novices nearby, and capuchins are relatively tolerant of one another, particularly adults of youngsters. Second, and fundamental for the discovery of tool use, capuchins generate a great variety of explorative and manipulative behaviors that involve acting with objects and on surfaces. Capuchins reliably spontaneously combine objects with surfaces and with each other by pounding and rubbing; they also insert their hands and objects in holes and crevices. When captive capuchins encounter objects they consider benign, whether novel or familiar, they quickly approach, explore and manipulate them with enthusiastic interest. Their interest towards objects persists over time, even towards familiar objects. Although wild capuchins initially often avoid novel objects, they explore and manipulate familiar objects and substrates (layers of soil that a plant or animal uses for support) persistently, and routinely engage in many actions. This can allow them to discover the consequences of actions combining objects and surfaces.



    All of these behavioral characteristics make it likely that a capuchin monkey upon encountering an interesting set of objects or an interesting surface with loose objects available, and with the motivation, time and security to investigate will produce actions with objects on surfaces. Tool use relies upon perception/action routines (e.g., pounding, inserting) that are applied to virtually any set of objects and surfaces they encounter. As a routine behavior, the monkey may occasionally combine one object or surface with another object, and so discover that using an object helps it achieve some goal. This scenario is sufficient to support the frequent discovery of tool use by captive capuchins, but one can see that it might not occur as often in natural settings.


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    解析

    【题型】文章小结题

    【答案】BCE

    【解析】

    A. 这个选项是错的,因为文章并没有提出卷尾猴在斜枝上执行动作和陆地猴在地面上执行动作同样容易。这个信息不符合文章的要点。

    B.这个选项是正确的。文章提到了虽然树栖性可能限制卷尾猴使用工具,但其他树栖灵长类动物(如黑猩猩和猩猩)也会使用工具。因此,树栖性不能单独解释卷尾猴较少使用工具的现象。

    C. 这个选项是正确的。文章提到圈养卷尾猴在有时间和安全感的情况下,会频繁地使用工具进行探索和操控,最终发现工具使用的技巧。

    D.这个选项是错的,因为文章并没有提到卷尾猴有某些类人猿没有的身体特征。实际上,文章指出卷尾猴与其他灵长类动物具有相似的解剖特征。

    E. 这个选项是正确的。文章提到卷尾猴在社会支持的环境中更容易习得工具使用技巧,并且它们对物体的持续兴趣促使它们探索工具使用。

    F. 这个选项是错的。虽然文章提到野生卷尾猴不常使用工具,但并没有具体说是因为精细操作技能或在野外学习的难度。

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