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Delayed search for a concealed imprinted object in the domestic chick
Authors:G Vallortigara  Lucia Regolin  Margherita Rigoni  Mario Zanforlin
Institution:(1) Dipartimento di Scienze Filosofiche e Storico-Sociali, Laboratorio di Psicologia Sperimentale, Università di Udine, Udine, Italy e-mail: giorgio.vallortigara@ifp.uniud.it, Fax: +39-432-556545, IT;(2) Dipartimento di Psicologia Generale, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy, IT
Abstract:Five-day-old chicks were accustomed to follow an imprinted object (a small red ball with which they had been reared) that was moving slowly in a large arena, until it disappeared behind an opaque screen. In experiments, each chick was initially confined in a transparent cage, from where it could see and track the ball while it moved towards, and then beyond, one of two screens. The screens could be either identical or differ in colour and pattern. Either immediately after the disappearance of the ball, or with a certain delay, the chick was released and allowed to search for its imprinted object behind either screen. The results showed that chicks took into account the directional cue provided by the ball movement and its concealment, up to a delay period of about 180 s, independently of the perceptual characteristics of the two screens. If an opaque partition was positioned in front of the transparent cage immediately after the ball had disappeared, so that, throughout the delay, neither the goal-object nor the two screens were visible, chicks were still capable of remembering and choosing the correct screen, though over a much shorter period of about 60 s. The results suggest that, at least in this precocial bird species, very young chicks can maintain some form of representation of the location where a social partner was last seen, and are also capable of continuously updating this representation so as to take into account successive displacements of the goal-object. Received: 17 January 1998 / Accepted after revision: 29 March 1998
Keywords:Delayed response  Imprinting  Memory  Chick  Gallus gallus
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