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THE EMERGENCE OF SYMMETRY IN A CONDITIONAL DISCRIMINATION TASK USING DIFFERENT RESPONSES AS PROPIOCEPTIVE SAMPLES IN PIGEONS
Author(s) -
García Andrés,
Benjumea Santiago
Publication year - 2006
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.2006.67-04
Subject(s) - peck (imperial) , key (lock) , psychology , artificial intelligence , discrimination learning , statistics , sample (material) , communication , cognitive psychology , pattern recognition (psychology) , arithmetic , computer science , mathematics , computer security , chemistry , chromatography , geometry
In Experiment 1, 10 pigeons were exposed to a successive symbolic matching‐to‐sample procedure in which the sample was generated by the pigeons' own behavior. Each trial began with both response keys illuminated white, one being the “correct” key and the other the “incorrect” key. The pigeons had no way of discriminating which key was correct and which incorrect, since these roles were assigned on a random basis with the same probability of 0.5 for each key. A fixed ratio of five responses was required on the correct key. However, each time the pigeon pecked the incorrect key, the correct key response counter reset. Five consecutive pecks on the correct key was the only way to end this component, and switch off both key lights. Two seconds later, these same keys were illuminated again, one green and the other red (comparison stimuli). Now, if the correct white key had been on the left, a peck at one color produced food, and if the correct white key had been on the right, a peck at the other color produced food. When the pigeons had learned this discrimination, they were exposed to several symmetry tests (simultaneous presentations of both keys illuminated the same color—i.e., both red or both green), in order to interchange the sample with the comparison stimuli. In Experiment 2, the importance of requiring discrimination between the samples and between the comparisons was analyzed. In Experiment 3, we compared the results of Experiment 1 with a slightly different experiment, which resulted in discrimination of key position, an exteroceptive stimulus. The results showed that symmetry emerged only when different responses were used as samples.

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