| Literature DB >> 30082590 |
Orsola Rosa-Salva1, József Fiser2, Elisabetta Versace3, Carola Dolci4, Sarah Chehaimi5, Chiara Santolin6, Giorgio Vallortigara7.
Abstract
Effective communication crucially depends on the ability to produce and recognize structured signals, as apparent in language and birdsong. Although it is not clear to what extent similar syntactic-like abilities can be identified in other animals, recently we reported that domestic chicks can learn abstract visual patterns and the statistical structure defined by a temporal sequence of visual shapes. However, little is known about chicks' ability to process spatial/positional information from visual configurations. Here, we used filial imprinting as an unsupervised learning mechanism to study spontaneous encoding of the structure of a configuration of different shapes. After being exposed to a triplet of shapes (ABC or CAB), chicks could discriminate those triplets from a permutation of the same shapes in different order (CAB or ABC), revealing a sensitivity to the spatial arrangement of the elements. When tested with a fragment taken from the imprinting triplet that followed the familiar adjacency-relationships (AB or BC) vs. one in which the shapes maintained their position with respect to the stimulus edges (AC), chicks revealed a preference for the configuration with familiar edge elements, showing an edge bias previously found only with temporal sequences.Entities:
Keywords: Gallus gallus; domestic chicks; implicit learning; imprinting; positional information; sequence learning; spatial/visual configurations; statistical learning
Year: 2018 PMID: 30082590 PMCID: PMC6115858 DOI: 10.3390/ani8080135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1The triplets used as imprinting and test stimuli in Experiment (Exp.) 1, ABC and CAB. The triplet ABC was used as imprinting stimulus in Exp. 2 and 3 (a); the two pairs of fragments used as test stimuli in Exp. 2, AB vs. AC and BC vs. AC (b); the two fragments used as test stimuli in Exp. 3, AC vs. CA (c).
Figure 2From left to right, the columns represent the average values of the preference (proportion of distance walked) for the familiar imprinting triplet (Exp. 1), for the bigram (AB or BC) that respects the between-elements adjacency-relationships (Exp. 2) and for the AC bigram (Exp. 3). Error bars represent the standard error of the mean (s.e.m.). The dotted line indicates the chance level (0.5), and * represent significant departures from chance (p < 0.05).