ABSTRACT This pilot study investigated domestic cat’s spontaneous ability to discriminate food quantity based on acoustic rather than visual cues, and on representational memory. The discrimination threshold was set at 4 versus 2 pieces of dry food pellets. Cats were rewarded whatever choice they made, but they could not access food used as stimulus. Food pellets were not patently showed to subjects during stimulus phase, but cats could hear single pellets falling into two steel cans, thus they received clear acoustic cues. Visual hints consisted merely in the hands of the researcher held above cans. Olfactory cues were neutralised by compensatory food odour diffusers. Since cats could not see food pellets, acoustic short-term representati...
Context-dependent choice is an important aspect of decision making. The paper examines context-depen...
Contrafreeloading is the willingness of animals to work for food when equivalent food is freely avai...
Domestic dogs tested in a free-choice task between two sets of food prefer that of a larger quantity...
ABSTRACT This pilot study investigated domestic cat’s spontaneous ability to discriminate food quan...
SPONTANEOUS QUANTITY DISCRIMINATION IN THE DOMESTIC CAT (Felis silvestris catus) Carloni E.1, Norma...
Although quantity discrimination and the factors affecting it have been widely studied in the domest...
The current research examined the ability of dogs to discriminate between different amounts of food....
Previous research has shown that the ratio between competing quantities of food significantly mediat...
There is considerable evidence that animals are able to discriminate between quantities. Despite the...
Current feeding practices in the confined domestic cat do not commonly mimic those observed in the f...
Quantity discrimination has been assessed in a variety of species and with a variety of paradigms. T...
Working memory in a cat was examined in the present study using a spatial memory task. One female do...
Contrafreeloading is the willingness of animals to work for food when equivalent food is freely avai...
The current research examined dog's ability to dsicriminate between different amounts of food. Using...
The current research examined the ability of dogs to discriminate between different amounts of food....
Context-dependent choice is an important aspect of decision making. The paper examines context-depen...
Contrafreeloading is the willingness of animals to work for food when equivalent food is freely avai...
Domestic dogs tested in a free-choice task between two sets of food prefer that of a larger quantity...
ABSTRACT This pilot study investigated domestic cat’s spontaneous ability to discriminate food quan...
SPONTANEOUS QUANTITY DISCRIMINATION IN THE DOMESTIC CAT (Felis silvestris catus) Carloni E.1, Norma...
Although quantity discrimination and the factors affecting it have been widely studied in the domest...
The current research examined the ability of dogs to discriminate between different amounts of food....
Previous research has shown that the ratio between competing quantities of food significantly mediat...
There is considerable evidence that animals are able to discriminate between quantities. Despite the...
Current feeding practices in the confined domestic cat do not commonly mimic those observed in the f...
Quantity discrimination has been assessed in a variety of species and with a variety of paradigms. T...
Working memory in a cat was examined in the present study using a spatial memory task. One female do...
Contrafreeloading is the willingness of animals to work for food when equivalent food is freely avai...
The current research examined dog's ability to dsicriminate between different amounts of food. Using...
The current research examined the ability of dogs to discriminate between different amounts of food....
Context-dependent choice is an important aspect of decision making. The paper examines context-depen...
Contrafreeloading is the willingness of animals to work for food when equivalent food is freely avai...
Domestic dogs tested in a free-choice task between two sets of food prefer that of a larger quantity...