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Object/picture recognition in hens.

R Railton1, T M Foster1, W Temple1

  • 1University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand.

Behavioural Processes
|February 8, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Hens (Gallus gallus domesticus) successfully transferred learning between real objects and their photographs when color cues were present. However, shape-only discriminations did not transfer, indicating hens do not perceive 2D images identically to 3D objects.

Area of Science:

  • Animal Cognition
  • Avian Behavior
  • Visual Perception

Background:

  • Understanding animal perception of two-dimensional (2D) stimuli is crucial for research validity.
  • Previous studies have not consistently established whether animals interpret photographs as equivalent to real-world, three-dimensional (3D) objects.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if hens (Gallus gallus domesticus) respond to photographs as they do to real objects.
  • To determine if visual discriminations learned with 3D objects transfer to 2D photographs, and vice versa.

Main Methods:

  • Experiment 1: Assessed transfer of discrimination between colored 3D objects and their 2D photographs.
  • Experiment 2: Examined transfer of discrimination using stimuli differing only in shape, comparing 3D objects and 2D photographs.
Keywords:
Conditional discriminationCorrespondenceHensObject–picture recognition

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Main Results:

  • Hens showed complete transfer of discrimination when color cues were present in both 3D objects and 2D photographs.
  • When only shape differed, discrimination learning was limited, and no transfer occurred between 3D objects and 2D photographs.
  • Prior object discrimination learning did not facilitate learning to discriminate between photographs.

Conclusions:

  • Hens do not perceive 2D representations as equivalent to 3D objects, especially when shape is the primary cue.
  • Researchers must experimentally validate the use of 2D stimuli as surrogates for real-world 3D stimuli in animal studies.