More evidence of robust spatial associative memory in the pigeon, Columba livia

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Abstract

Willson and Wilkie (1993) developed a novel procedure for assessing pigeons' memory for the spatial location of food. Only one of four locations (consisting of an illuminated pecking key and grain feeder) provided food each day. Over days, different locations provided food. The pigeons' tendency to revisit the location that was profitable on the previous day demonstrated memory for food-spatiallocation associations over a period of 24 h, retention longer than previously reported for this species. This basic finding was replicated and extended in three experiments. Experiment 1 demonstrated that location-food discriminations were also remembered well when established with successive rather than concurrent procedures. Experiment 2 demonstrated that pigeons can remember two location-food associations over 24 h. Experiment 3 showed that the discrimination training inherent in this paradigm is important for retention; retention was impaired when only the rewarded location was presented. Overall, this research suggests that cross-species differences in spatial memory performance may be due to quantitative rather than qualitative differences in the memory system underlying performance. © 1995 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Wilkie, D. M., & Willson, R. J. (1995). More evidence of robust spatial associative memory in the pigeon, Columba livia. Animal Learning & Behavior, 23(1), 69–75. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03198017

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