Literature DB >> 25728287

The visual cliff's forgotten menagerie: rats, goats, babies, and myth-making in the history of psychology.

Elissa N Rodkey.   

Abstract

Eleanor Gibson and Richard Walk's famous visual cliff experiment is one of psychology's classic studies, included in most introductory textbooks. Yet the famous version which centers on babies is actually a simplification, the result of disciplinary myth-making. In fact the visual cliff's first subjects were rats, and a wide range of animals were tested on the cliff, including chicks, turtles, lambs, kid goats, pigs, kittens, dogs, and monkeys. The visual cliff experiment was more accurately a series of experiments, employing varying methods and a changing apparatus, modified to test different species. This paper focuses on the initial, nonhuman subjects of the visual cliff, resituating the study in its original experimental logic, connecting it to the history of comparative psychology, Gibson's interest in comparative psychology, as well as gender-based discrimination. Recovering the visual cliff's forgotten menagerie helps to counter the romanticization of experimentation by focusing on the role of extrascientific factors, chance, complexity, and uncertainty in the experimental process.
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25728287     DOI: 10.1002/jhbs.21712

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Behav Sci        ISSN: 0022-5061


  1 in total

1.  Working across species down on the farm: Howard S. Liddell and the development of comparative psychopathology, c. 1923-1962.

Authors:  Robert G W Kirk; Edmund Ramsden
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2018-02-07       Impact factor: 1.205

  1 in total

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