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Rapid self-recognition ability in the cleaner fish
by
Sogawa, Shumpei
, Kobayashi, Taiga
, Nakai, Yuta
, Kubo, Naoki
, Sowersby, Will
, Awata, Satoshi
, Kohda, Masanori
, Bshary, Redouan
in
631/181
/ 631/477
/ 631/601
/ Aggressiveness
/ Animal cognition
/ Animal welfare
/ Animals
/ Behavior
/ Behavior, Animal - physiology
/ Cognition
/ Cognition - physiology
/ Ectoparasites
/ Exploratory behavior
/ Fish
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Hypotheses
/ Monkeys & apes
/ multidisciplinary
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Self awareness
/ Self-recognition
/ Taxa
2025
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Rapid self-recognition ability in the cleaner fish
by
Sogawa, Shumpei
, Kobayashi, Taiga
, Nakai, Yuta
, Kubo, Naoki
, Sowersby, Will
, Awata, Satoshi
, Kohda, Masanori
, Bshary, Redouan
in
631/181
/ 631/477
/ 631/601
/ Aggressiveness
/ Animal cognition
/ Animal welfare
/ Animals
/ Behavior
/ Behavior, Animal - physiology
/ Cognition
/ Cognition - physiology
/ Ectoparasites
/ Exploratory behavior
/ Fish
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Hypotheses
/ Monkeys & apes
/ multidisciplinary
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Self awareness
/ Self-recognition
/ Taxa
2025
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Rapid self-recognition ability in the cleaner fish
by
Sogawa, Shumpei
, Kobayashi, Taiga
, Nakai, Yuta
, Kubo, Naoki
, Sowersby, Will
, Awata, Satoshi
, Kohda, Masanori
, Bshary, Redouan
in
631/181
/ 631/477
/ 631/601
/ Aggressiveness
/ Animal cognition
/ Animal welfare
/ Animals
/ Behavior
/ Behavior, Animal - physiology
/ Cognition
/ Cognition - physiology
/ Ectoparasites
/ Exploratory behavior
/ Fish
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Hypotheses
/ Monkeys & apes
/ multidisciplinary
/ Recognition, Psychology - physiology
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Self awareness
/ Self-recognition
/ Taxa
2025
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Journal Article
Rapid self-recognition ability in the cleaner fish
2025
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Overview
Whether animals are self-aware has important implications for our approaches to both animal cognition and animal welfare. A landmark moment in animal cognition research was when great apes passed the mark-test and demonstrated mirror self-recognition (MSR). Animals that pass the mark-test are capable of visually self-recognising and considered to be self-aware. Other taxa, including a fish, the cleaner wrasse (cleaner fish:
Labroides dimidiatus
) have also now passed the mark-test, forcing a rethink of the mental and neurological requirements for MSR. Previous research has largely focused on which species can pass the mark-test, rather than the processes underlying MSR. Here, we marked mirror-naïve cleaner fish with an ecologically relevant mark resembling an ectoparasite and then undertook detailed behavioural observations after exposure to a mirror. We found that cleaner fish achieve MSR rapidly, implying self-awareness prior to mirror exposure. By observing the exact timing of MSR in individuals, we could also report previously undocumented differences in pre- and post-MSR behaviours, including post-MSR exploratory behaviour of the mirror’s reflective properties. We find remarkable parallels between the processing of MSR in humans and cleaner fish, suggesting that some aspects of self-awareness are conserved across animal taxa.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group,Nature Portfolio
Subject
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