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Relational discrimination by pigeons in a go/no-go procedure with compound stimuli: a methodological note
Document Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
2011-11-16Keywords
AnimalsColumbidae
Conditioning, Operant
*Discrimination (Psychology)
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Photic Stimulation
Reinforcement (Psychology)
Experimental Analysis of Behavior
Mental and Social Health
Neuroscience and Neurobiology
Psychiatry and Psychology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A go/no-go procedure with compound stimuli typically establishes emergent behavior that parallels in structure and typical outcome that of conventional tests for symmetric, transitive, and equivalence relations in normally capable adults. The present study employed a go/no-go compound stimulus procedure with pigeons. During training, pecks to two-component compounds A1B1, A2B2, B1C1, and B2C2 were followed by food. Pecks to compounds A1B2, A2B1, B1C2, and B2C1 re-started the 30-s stimulus presentation interval. The absence of pecking to those compounds for 30 s ended the trial. Subsequent tests presented these components in new spatial arrangements and/or in recombinative compounds that together corresponded to conventional tests of symmetry, transitivity, and equivalence: B1A1, B2A2, C1B1, C2B2, A1C1, A2C2, C1A1, C2A2 vs. B1A2, B2A1, C1B2, C2B1, A1C2, A2C1, C1A2, C2A1 (positive vs. negative instances of symmetric, transitive, and equivalence relations). On tests for symmetric relations, all pigeons behaved in a manner consistent with training on both positive instances (i.e., by responding) and on negative instances (i.e., by not responding). By contrast, the pigeons' behavior on tests for transitivity and equivalence was inconsistent with baseline training, thus failing to show the recombinative discrimination performance that is typical of normally capable humans when trained and tested using the go/no-go procedure with compound stimuli.Source
Campos HC, Debert P, da Silva Barros R, McIlvane WJ. Relational discrimination by pigeons in a go/no-go procedure with compound stimuli: a methodological note. J Exp Anal Behav. 2011 Nov;96(3):417-26. doi: 10.1901/jeab.2011.96-413. PubMed PMID: 22084498; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3213004. Link to article on publisher's website
DOI
10.1901/jeab.2011.96-413Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/48970PubMed ID
22084498Related Resources
Link to article in PubMedae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1901/jeab.2011.96-413