نتایج جستجو برای: pigeons

تعداد نتایج: 3557  

Journal: :Journal of comparative psychology 2002
Brigette R Dorrance Thomas R Zentall

In the present experiments, the 2-action method was used to determine whether pigeons could learn to imitate a conditional discrimination. Demonstrator pigeons (Columba livia) stepped on a treadle in the presence of 1 light and pecked at the treadle in the presence of another light. Demonstration did not seem to affect acquisition of the conditional discrimination (Experiment 1) but did facilit...

2005
Anthony A. Wright

Ab,stract—Concept learning and learning .strategies of pigeons were titanipnkited in a ntatching-to-sampie task. Groups of 4 pigeons responded either 0. 1. W. or 20 times to a sample stimulus, and then chose between a matching cotnparison stimulus and a ttonmatching comparison stimulus. Tests with unfamiliar arrangements of the three training stimuli .showed that learning n-as not hy if-then ru...

Journal: :Perception & psychophysics 1989
R J Herrnstein W Vaughan D B Mumford S M Kosslyn

In 49 sessions, pigeons failed to learn to sort a collection of 80 stimuli composed of a closed curve and a dot, divided into two categories, according to whether the dot was or was not inside the curve. Next, the pigeons were successfully trained, first with the insides of the curves shown in bright red, then with a darker red, and finally with a black matching the background outside the curve...

Journal: :iranian journal of veterinary science and technology 0
maryam gholizadeh mousa tavassoli farid rezaei zahra nikousefat

argas reflexus is considered obligate blood feeder that may cause skin redness and local swelling. for histopathological evaluation of biting site, pigeons were used as natural host species in this study. adult ticks were collected from urmia, north-west of iran and kept in a desiccator before their use in the experiment. sixteen pigeons were infested experimentally and were divided into 4 grou...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2007
Roderick S Bain Arash Rashed Verity J Cowper Francis S Gilbert Thomas N Sherratt

Batesian mimicry occurs when a palatable species (the mimic) gains protection from predators by resembling an unpalatable or otherwise protected species (the model). While some mimetic species resemble their models closely, other species ('imperfect mimics') are thought to bear only a crude likeness. In an earlier study, pigeons (Columba livia) were trained to recognize wasp images in one exper...

Journal: :Vision Research 2010
Ulrike Aust Ludwig Huber

Pigeons have previously been shown to readily categorize pictures with and without humans and to also recognize the correspondence between live humans and pictures of them. Here, we investigated the role of skin-related features for their possible influence on pigeons' categorization and recognition of humans in pictures. Pigeons were tested with stimuli that contained parts of humans that were...

2014
Hyungwook Yim Leyre Castro Edward Wasserman Vladimir M. Sloutsky

The current study investigated the interactions among category structure, supervision, and the ability to selectively attend during category learning. Specifically, we compared pigeons’ with human adults’ category learning using artificial categories to examine the role of selective attention in category learning. Results showed that pigeons benefit more from supervision, and unlike human adult...

Journal: :Journal of comparative psychology 2012
Kristina F Pattison Thomas R Zentall Shigeru Watanabe

The sunk cost effect involves the bias to stay with an alternative because one has already invested resources, even when there is a better alternative available. In a series of experiments, at various points during a 30-peck requirement, pigeons (Columba livia) could choose between completing the response requirement (at a different location in Experiment 1 or the same location in Experiments 3...

Journal: :Journal of experimental psychology. General 2005
Alinda Friedman Marcia L Spetch Anne Ferrey

Humans and pigeons were trained to discriminate between 2 views of actual 3-D objects or their photographs. They were tested on novel views that were either within the closest rotational distance between the training views (interpolated) or outside of that range (extrapolated). When training views were 60 degrees apart, pigeons, but not humans, recognized novel views of actual objects better th...

Journal: :Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior 2002
Walter T Herbranson Thane Fremouw Charles P Shimp

Pigeons categorized a moving target in terms of its speed and direction in an adaptation of the randomization procedure used to study human categorization behavior (Ashby & Maddox, 1998). The target moved according to vectors that were sampled with equal probabilities from two slightly overlapping bivariate normal distributions with the dimensions of speed and direction. On the average, pigeons...

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