Differences in matching-to-sample performance with element and compound sample stimuli in pigeons |
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Authors: | Angelo Santi Vic Grossi Margaret Gibson |
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Affiliation: | Wilfrid Laurier University Canada |
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Abstract: | This series of experiments examined zero-delay matching-to-sample performance in pigeons with element and compound sample stimuli. In Experiment 1, compound sample stimuli were consistently followed by compound comparison stimuli and matching accuracy during testing was equivalent to element sample-element comparison trials on the color dimension. In Experiment 2, element comparisons suddenly introduced following compound samples produced a decrement on the line dimension only. Subsequent testing at various sample durations revealed higher matching accuracy following element samples than following compound samples on both the color and line-tilt dimensions. Experiment 3 replicated the results of Experiments 1 and 2 and also demonstrated that the superiority of element over compound matching performance remains constant over the sample durations tested. In Experiment 4 testing at sample durations up to 30 sec produced an overall decrement in matching performance, but again the element vs compound matching difference remained constant. The stimulus-generalization decrement hypothesis provided a better explanation of these results than either the information-overload hypothesis or the rule hypothesis. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to Angelo Santi Department of Psychology Wilfrid Laurier University Waterloo Ontario N2L 3C5 Canada. |
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