A method for studying stimulus class dynamics using budgerigars and vocal responding |
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Authors: | J. MARK CLEAVELAND KAZUCHIKA MANABE |
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Affiliation: | 1. Vassar College;2. The work was supported by grants from the N.S.F. and N.I.M.H. to J.E.R. Staddon and from the D.F.G. to Juan Delius.;3. Nihon University;4. Kazuchika Manabe, Graduate School of Social and Cultural Studies, Nihon University, Nakatomi‐minami, Tokorozawa 395‐0003, Japan. (E‐mail: ) |
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Abstract: | We describe a methodology for examining stimulus class dynamics in budgerigars. Three budgerigars served as subjects. Four call types were trained as operant responses to four discriminative stimuli. The birds were over‐trained in this discrimination, and then run through two conditions. In Condition 1 the birds were trained to peck two of the four stimuli when these two stimuli appeared in two novel locations, while continuing to vocalize to all four stimuli when they occurred in the original training location. An analysis of vocal errors showed that the two stimuli assigned to the peck response were more likely to become confused with one another. In Condition 2 the birds experienced symbolic matching‐to‐sample training. Vocal discrimination trials were run concurrently with this training. The observed vocal‐response errors suggest that during a matching‐to‐sample task, sample stimuli became temporarily confused with one another. The results, although primarily intended to illustrate the utility of our method, support the hypothesis that stimuli assigned a common response become more similar, or equivalent, to one another. |
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Keywords: | vocal recognition budgerigars equivalence stimulus class |
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