Abstract
In humans, awareness of an upcoming memory test enhances intentional encoding and improves memory recall. Here, we investigated whether dolphins exhibit similar future-oriented encoding of information known to be needed in the future. Dolphins were trained to remember specific, randomly assigned actions for later re-enactment, with either immediate or delayed recall. When an unexpected delay was introduced in trials anticipating immediate recall, memory was retained for only 13 seconds, suggesting working memory encoding. However, when instructed to expect delayed recall, dolphins accurately reproduced actions after delays even after 16 hours. These results suggest that dolphins, anticipating future need, intentionally encode actions to be performed in the future into long-term memory, implying prospective encoding and prospective memory capacities. Their memory also displayed key features of episodic memory: encoding occurred in a single episode, and memory was declarative, as the action itself declared its content. Moreover, dolphins more effectively recalled self-performed actions compared to gestural codifications of the same actions, mirroring the human-typical “enactment effect” and supporting episodic-like memory over semantic memory. Our findings indicate that dolphins show awareness of future memory demands and seem to use a future-oriented, episodic-like memory system, capable of storing prospectively encoded, intended actions in long-term memory.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.