“…However, rhesus monkeys and rats can provide other responses that reflect the monitoring of uncertainty of their perceptual experiences (Beran, Smith, Redford, & Washburn, 2006; Foote & Crystal, 2007, 2012; Shields, Smith, & Washburn, 1997; Smith, Beran, Redford, & Washburn, 2006; Smith, Redford, Beran, & Washburn, 2010; Smith, Schull, Strote, McGee, Egnor, & Erb, 1995; Smith, Shields, Schull, & Washburn, 1997) and pigeons, rhesus monkeys, and orangutans provide responses that reflect monitoring of memory (Adams & Santi, 2011; Basile, Hampton, Suomi, & Murray, 2009; Fujita, 2009; Hampton, 2001; Hampton & Hampstead, 2006; Inman & Shettleworth, 1999; Smith, Shields, Allendoerfer, & Washburn, 1998; Suda-King, 2008; Suda-King, Bania, Stromberg, & Subiaul, 2013; Sutton & Shettleworth, 2008; Templer & Hampton, 2012). Rhesus monkeys, chimpanzees, orangutans, and pigeons have demonstrated the ability to search for needed information (Beran & Smith, 2011; Beran, Smith, & Perdue, 2013; Call, 2010; Call & Carpenter, 2001; Castro & Wasserman, 2013; Hampton, Zivin, & Murray, 2004; Iwasaki, Watanabe, & Fujita, 2013; Kirk, McMillan, & Roberts, 2014; Marsh & MacDonald, 2012a, 2012b; Roberts et al, 2009), and have even shown the capacity to make confidence judgments about the outcomes of already completed responses, although only with extensive training (Kornell, Son, & Terrace, 2007; Morgan, Kornell, Kornblum, & Terrace, 2014; Nakamura, Watanabe, Betsuyaku, & Fujita, 2011; Shields, Smith, Guttmannova, & Washburn, 2005). …”