Pigeons were trained on a zero-delay matching-to-sample procedure during which only three of the four possible stimulus configurations were presented. Subsequently, all birds were exposed to all four configurations as a transfer test. A high degree of negative transfer from the three training configurations was obtained in Experiment 1. The results of Experiment 2 indicated that three-configuration training produced differential position-preference effects. During the transfer test, responding after one sample stimulus was apparently based on position, while responding after the other sample was based on color
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychologic...
When animals are tested for symmetry (the ability to match B to A after being trained to match A to ...
AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE AMBIGUOUS\ud CUE PROBLEM WITH PIGEONS\ud by\ud Nicholas Michael Nardi\ud M...
Pigeons were trained on a zero-delay matching-to-sample procedure during which only three of the fou...
Pigeons were trained on a zero-delay matching-to-sample procedure during which only three of the fou...
Two experiments investigated what makes it more likely that pigeons’ behavior will come under the co...
Twelve Carneaux pigeons were divided into three groups and trained on zero-delay matching-to-sample,...
Minimal procedures for the demonstration of transitive inference (TI) in animals have involved the t...
Pigeons were trained to learn an instrumental oddity-from-sample discrimination involving visual for...
Four male homing pigeons, one and a half years old at the start of testing, were trained to a criter...
In Experiment 1, pigeons were trained on a conditional discrimination in which presentations of a co...
We deployed the Multiple Necessary Cues (MNC) discrimination task to see if pigeons can simultaneous...
Fersen et al. (1991) (J. Exp. Psychol.: Anim. Behav. Process., 17: 334–341) trained pigeons to discr...
Humans often treat two stimuli that are associated with a common response as similar in other contex...
To study how multiple stimuli may control discriminative behavior, we exposed fifteen pigeons to a s...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychologic...
When animals are tested for symmetry (the ability to match B to A after being trained to match A to ...
AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE AMBIGUOUS\ud CUE PROBLEM WITH PIGEONS\ud by\ud Nicholas Michael Nardi\ud M...
Pigeons were trained on a zero-delay matching-to-sample procedure during which only three of the fou...
Pigeons were trained on a zero-delay matching-to-sample procedure during which only three of the fou...
Two experiments investigated what makes it more likely that pigeons’ behavior will come under the co...
Twelve Carneaux pigeons were divided into three groups and trained on zero-delay matching-to-sample,...
Minimal procedures for the demonstration of transitive inference (TI) in animals have involved the t...
Pigeons were trained to learn an instrumental oddity-from-sample discrimination involving visual for...
Four male homing pigeons, one and a half years old at the start of testing, were trained to a criter...
In Experiment 1, pigeons were trained on a conditional discrimination in which presentations of a co...
We deployed the Multiple Necessary Cues (MNC) discrimination task to see if pigeons can simultaneous...
Fersen et al. (1991) (J. Exp. Psychol.: Anim. Behav. Process., 17: 334–341) trained pigeons to discr...
Humans often treat two stimuli that are associated with a common response as similar in other contex...
To study how multiple stimuli may control discriminative behavior, we exposed fifteen pigeons to a s...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychologic...
When animals are tested for symmetry (the ability to match B to A after being trained to match A to ...
AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE AMBIGUOUS\ud CUE PROBLEM WITH PIGEONS\ud by\ud Nicholas Michael Nardi\ud M...