
We argue that comparative psychologists have been too quick to jump to metacognitive interpretations of their data. We examine two such cases in some detail. One concerns so-called "uncertainty monitoring" behavior, which we show to be better explained in terms of first-order estimates of risk. The other concerns informational search, which we argue is better explained in terms of a first-order curiosity-like motivation that directs questions at the environment.
curiosity, QL, interest, QL1-991, question, uncertainty, metacognition, Zoology, risk evaluation
curiosity, QL, interest, QL1-991, question, uncertainty, metacognition, Zoology, risk evaluation
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