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Gaze discrimination learning in olive baboons (Papio anubis)
Authors:Sarah-Jane Vick  Dalila Bovet  James R. Anderson
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland, UK,;(2) Language Research Center, Department of Psychology, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA,
Abstract:The ability to discriminate between pairs of photographs according to the portrayed model's visual attention status was examined in four olive baboons. Two baboons successfully managed to solve the problem, even when attention was demonstrated by eye direction alone. A third showed an ability to discriminate head direction but not eye direction. In order to investigate further their ability to discriminate attention, the two successful baboons and two na?ve baboons were presented with a simple object-choice task accompanied by experimenter-given cues. There was no evidence of transfer from the photographic stimuli to a real model; only one baboon showed signs of using the experimenter's attention to chose between two objects, and only after over 300 trials. These results could suggest that the baboons used simple physical cues rather than a concept of attention to solve the picture discrimination but alternative explanations are also discussed. Accepted after revision: 5 February 2001 Electronic Publication
Keywords:Baboon Experimenter-given cues Gaze Object-choice task Picture discrimination
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