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Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior logoLink to Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
. 1976 Sep;26(2):207–212. doi: 10.1901/jeab.1976.26-207

Attention in the pigeon: a reevaluation1

Donald M Wilkie, Michael E Masson
PMCID: PMC1333507  PMID: 16811942

Abstract

During training sessions, pigeons were successively exposed to compounds consisting of a white triangle on a red background and a white circle on a green background. Key pecking intermittently produced grain reinforcers in the presence of one form-color compound. Once key pecking was confined to the compound associated with reinforcement, the elements—red, green, triangle, and circle—were presented during a test in which no reinforcement was available. Each bird pecked nearly exclusively in the presence of the color previously associated with reinforcement, a result that might be interpreted as indicating that the subjects had attended to color, but not form during training. Pecking was next reinforced when either the triangle or the circle was present. Pecking in the presence of the form previously associated with reinforcement was acquired more rapidly. This result suggests that the birds had learned about the forms during training, and that conclusions about attention based on the lack of differential pecking in the nonreinforcement test may not be appropriate.

Keywords: stimulus control, attention, compound stimuli, nonreinforcement test, resistance-to-reinforcement test, key pecking, pigeons

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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