Perceptual organization of motions in pigeons (Columba livia)

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Abstract

We investigated whether pigeons perceived relative motion of more than one object. We trained pigeons to match a white target dot moving vertically at a constant speed to one color and the same dot moving diagonally to another. In Experiment 1, we presented an additional yellow dot (accompanying dot) moving horizontally near the target. We hypothesized that the pigeons would match the diagonal motion to the color for "vertical motion" and vice versa if they perceived relative motion of the target and the accompanying dot. We reduced the size and the speed of the stimuli by half in Experiment 2 and changed the movement pattern of the target to a sine-function in Experiment 3. In Experiment 4, we presented two accompanying dots. However, the results of Experiments 1 to 4 showed no evidence that pigeons perceived relative motion. In Experiment 5, we substituted a moving frame for accompanying dots. The pigeons tended to respond to the color corresponding to the relative motion. These results suggest that pigeons may organize a set of moving objects as one object moving relative to the other in some stimulus displays in which the second object constitutes an explicit reference frame.

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Ushitani, T., Fujita, K., & Sato, A. (2004). Perceptual organization of motions in pigeons (Columba livia). Japanese Psychological Research, 46(3), 170–181. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5584.2004.00249.x

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