Literature DB >> 1842858

How animals use images.

M E Rilling1, J J Neiworth.   

Abstract

Animal cognition is a field within experimental psychology in which cognitive processes formerly studied exclusively with people have been demonstrated in animals. Evidence for imagery in the pigeon emerges from the experiments described here. The pigeon's task was to discriminate, by pecking the appropriate choice key, between a clock hand presented on a video screen that rotated clockwise with constant velocity from a clock hand that violated constant velocity. Imagery was defined by trials on which the line rotated from 12.00 o'clock to 3.00 o'clock, then disappeared during a delay, and reappeared at a final stop location beyond 3.00 o'clock. After acquisition of a discrimination with final stop locations at 3.00 o'clock and 6.00 o'clock, the evidence for imagery was the accurate responding of the pigeons to novel locations at 4.00 o'clock and 7.00 o'clock. Pigeons display evidence of imagery by transforming a representation of movement that includes a series of intermediate steps which accurately represent the location of a moving stimulus after it disappears.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1842858

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Prog        ISSN: 0036-8504            Impact factor:   2.774


  1 in total

1.  Mental Misrepresentation in Non-human Psychopathology.

Authors:  Krystyna Bielecka; Mira Marcinów
Journal:  Biosemiotics       Date:  2017-08-04       Impact factor: 0.711

  1 in total

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