4.2 Article

A Comparative Analysis of the Categorization of Multidimensional Stimuli: I. Unidimensional Classification Does Not Necessarily Imply Analytic Processing; Evidence From Pigeons (Columba livia), Squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis), and Humans (Homo sapiens)

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 123, Issue 4, Pages 391-405

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0016216

Keywords

pigeon; undergraduate; eastern gray squirrel; categorization; rule-governed behavior

Funding

  1. European Community [516542]
  2. Economic and Social Research Council [ES/D004489/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  3. ESRC [ES/D004489/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Pigeons (Columba livia), gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis), and undergraduates (Homo sapiens) learned discrimination tasks involving multiple mutually redundant dimensions. First, pigeons and undergraduates learned conditional discriminations between stimuli composed of three spatially separated dimensions, after first learning to discriminate the individual elements of the stimuli. When subsequently tested with stimuli in which one of the dimensions took an anomalous value, the majority of both species categorized test stimuli by their overall similarity to training stimuli. However some individuals of both species categorized them according to a single dimension. In a second set of experiments, squirrels, pigeons, and undergraduates learned go/no-go discriminations using multiple Simultaneous presentations of stimuli composed of three spatially integrated, highly salient dimensions. The tendency to categorize test stimuli including anomalous dimension values unidimensionally was higher than in the first set of experiments and did not differ significantly between species. The authors conclude that unidimensional categorization of multidimensional stimuli is not diagnostic for analytic cognitive processing, and that any differences between human's and pigeons' behavior in such tasks are not due to special features of avian visual cognition.

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