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Multiple landmarks, the encoding of environmental geometry and the spatial logics of a dual brain
Authors:A. Della Chiesa  T. Pecchia  L. Tommasi  G. Vallortigara
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology and B.R.A.I.N. Centre for Neuroscience, University of Trieste, via S. Anastasio 12, 34100 Trieste, Italy;(2) Cognitive Neuroscience Sector, I.S.A.S.-S.I.S.S.A., International School for Advanced Studies, via Beirut 2-4, 34100 Trieste, Italy;(3) Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Chieti, Blocco A, Via dei Vestini 31, 66013 Chieti, Italy
Abstract:A series of place learning experiments was carried out in young chicks (Gallus gallus) in order to investigate how the geometry of a landmark array and that of a walled enclosure compete when disoriented animals could rely on both of them to re-orient towards the centre of the enclosure. A square-shaped array (four wooden sticks) was placed in the middle of a square-shaped enclosure, the two structures being concentric. Chicks were trained to ground-scratch to search for food hidden in the centre of the enclosure (and the array). To check for effects of array degradation, one, two, three or all landmarks were removed during test trials. Chicks concentrated their searching activity in the central area of the enclosure, but their accuracy was inversely contingent on the number of landmarks removed; moreover, the landmarks still present within the enclosure appeared to influence the shape of the searching patterns. The reduction in the number of landmarks affected the searching strategy of chicks, suggesting that they had focussed mainly on local cues when landmarks were present within the enclosure. When all the landmarks were removed, chicks searched over a larger area, suggesting an absolute encoding of distances from the local cues and less reliance on the relationships provided by the geometry of the enclosure. Under conditions of monocular vision, chicks tended to rely on different strategies to localize the centre on the basis of the eye (and thus the hemisphere) in use, the left hemisphere attending to details of the environment and the right hemisphere attending to the global shape.This contribution is part of the special issue “Animal Logics” (Watanabe and Huber 2006).
Keywords:Spatial cognition  Geometry  Brain asymmetry  Hemisphere  Chick
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