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NEAR‐FIELD VISUAL ACUITY OF PIGEONS: EFFECTS OF HEAD LOCATION AND STIMULUS LUMINANCE
Author(s) -
Hodos William,
Leibowitz Rosalind W.,
Bonbright James C.
Publication year - 1976
Publication title -
journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1938-3711
pISSN - 0022-5002
DOI - 10.1901/jeab.1976.25-129
Subject(s) - luminance , stimulus (psychology) , grating , psychophysics , optics , psychology , audiology , blank , visual acuity , visual field , artificial intelligence , computer vision , mathematics , communication , physics , computer science , medicine , engineering , perception , neuroscience , cognitive psychology , mechanical engineering
Two pigeons were trained to discriminate a grating stimulus from a blank stimulus of equivalent luminance in a three‐key chamber. The stimuli and blanks were presented behind a transparent center key. The procedure was a conditional discrimination in which pecks on the left key were reinforced if the blank had been present behind the center key and pecks on the right key were reinforced if the grating had been present behind the center key. The spatial frequency of the stimuli was varied in each session from four to 29.5 lines per millimeter in accordance with a variation of the method of constant stimuli. The number of lines per millimeter that the subjects could discriminate at threshold was determined from psychometric functions. Data were collected at five values of stimulus luminance ranging from −0.07 to 3.29 log cd/m 2 . The distance from the stimulus to the anterior nodal point of the eye, which was determined from measurements taken from high‐speed motion‐picture photographs of three additional pigeons and published intraocular measurements, was 62.0 mm. This distance and the grating detection thresholds were used to calculate the visual acuity of the birds at each level of luminance. Acuity improved with increasing luminance to a peak value of 0.52, which corresponds to a visual angle of 1.92 min, at a luminance of 2.33 log cd/m 2 . Further increase in luminance produced a small decline in acuity.

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