Abstract
Pigeons and adult humans searched for a 2-cm2 unmarked goal in digitized images of an outdoor scene presented on a touch-screen monitor. In Experiment 1, the scene contained three landmarks near the goal and a visually rich background. Six training images presented the scene from different viewing directions and distances. Subsequent unreinforced tests in which landmark or background cues were removed or shifted revealed that pigeons' search was controlled by both proximal landmarks and background cues, whereas humans relied only on the proximal landmarks. Pigeons' search accuracy dropped substantially when they were presented with novel views of the same scene, whereas humans showed perfect transfer to novel views. In Experiment 2, pigeons with previous outdoor experience and humans were trained with 28 views of an outdoor scene. Both pigeons and humans transferred well to novel views of the scene. This positive transfer suggests that, under some conditions, pigeons, like humans, may encode the three- dimensional spatial information in images of a scene.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Spetch, M. L., Kelly, D. M., & Lechelt, D. P. (1998). Encoding of spatial information in images of an outdoor scene by pigeons and humans. Animal Learning and Behavior, 26(1), 85–102. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03199164
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