Night migratory birds use the star compass for their navigation. Here, I examined discrimination of a starry sky by a nonmigratory bird, the pigeon. Four pigeons were trained in an operant chamber to discriminate between an artificial starry sky created using software (Stella Theater Pro) and a black sky without stars. After they learned the task, they received three generalization tests. Test 1 presented a starry sky with different classes of stars (i.e., the number of stars was changed). Test 2 presented a starry sky at different times (i.e., a horizontal shift of the sky). Test 3 presented a starry sky at different latitudes (i.e., a vertical shift of the sky). The pigeons displayed a clear generalization gradient with a peak shift to the sky with more stars in Test 1 and a peak close to the original sky in Test 3, but almost a flat gradient in Test 2. Therefore, pigeons demonstrated stimulus control using the pattern of the stars, and they were more sensitive to the vertical shift than to the horizontal shift.
CITATION STYLE
Watanabe, S. (2020). Discrimination of artificial starry sky by pigeons. Learning and Behavior, 48(1), 22–26. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-020-00420-x
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