Roles of visual and taste cues in ingestional neophobia: Response latency effects in chicks (Gallus domesticus)

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Abstract

Latency measures of starting to drink and of consummatory behavior were used to investigate ingestional neophobia to novel visual and novel taste cues in chicks. In Experiment 1 (N = 36), latencies to start drinking were reliably shorter to ingesta that appeared familiar from previous rearing or preexposure procedures. After drinking started, consummatory responding occurred reliably more rapidly to familiar taste cues than to novel ones. However, the presence of familiar visual cues reliably facilitated consumption of a novel taste. Experiments 2 and 3 (Ns = 144 and 180) were performed to evaluate, respectively, whether the ingestional effects of taste stimulus intensity, 0%-6% vinegar, and of visual stimulus intensity, 0%-1.0% concentrations of red food-coloring in water, changed during ontogeny for chicks 3, 5, and 7 days old. In Experiment 2, reliable direct effects of taste concentration on consummatory response latencies occurred immediately in 7-day-olds but were delayed in 3-day-olds. In Experiment 3, each age group immediately showed reliably slower starting and consummatory response times, the higher the concentration of red food-coloring. Intake performance in both experiments was consistent with the latency data. Experiments 1-3 showed that visual and taste cues of ingesta separately influenced approach and consummatory behaviors of the ingestive response sequence and that these influences depend on ontogenetic events. © 1994 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Franchina, J. J., Johnson, L. J., & Leynes, P. A. (1994). Roles of visual and taste cues in ingestional neophobia: Response latency effects in chicks (Gallus domesticus). Animal Learning & Behavior, 22(3), 341–350. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209843

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