| Literature DB >> 24188621 |
Walter T Herbranson1, Yvan T Trinh1, Patricia M Xi1, Mark P Arand1, Michael S K Barker1, Theodore H Pratt1.
Abstract
Change blindness is a phenomenon in which even obvious details in a visual scene change without being noticed. Although change blindness has been studied extensively in humans, we do not yet know if it is a phenomenon that also occurs in other animals. Thus, investigation of change blindness in a nonhuman species may prove to be valuable by beginning to provide some insight into its ultimate causes. Pigeons learned a change detection task in which pecks to the location of a change in a sequence of stimulus displays were reinforced. They were worse at detecting changes if the stimulus displays were separated by a brief interstimulus interval, during which the display was blank, and this primary result matches the general pattern seen in previous studies of change blindness in humans. A second experiment attempted to identify specific stimulus characteristics that most reliably produced a failure to detect changes. Change detection was more difficult when interstimulus intervals were longer and when the change was iterated fewer times. ©2014 APA, all rights reserved.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24188621 DOI: 10.1037/a0034567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Psychol ISSN: 0021-9940 Impact factor: 2.231