Volume 16, Issue 2 pp. 189-192
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APPARENT MOVEMENT AND REAL MOVEMENT DETECTION IN THE PIGEON: STIMULUS GENERALIZATION

R.K. Siegel

Corresponding Author

R.K. Siegel

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES

Supported by grant APT-102 from the National Research Council of Canada. Manuscript preparation supported by grant MH-05319 from N.I.M.H. This research was conducted in the Department of Psychology at Dalhousie University. The author is indebted to W. K. Honig, N. J. Mackintosh, R. Over, and M. E. Jarvik for advice and support.

Department of Pharmacology, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90024.Search for more papers by this author
First published: September 1971
Citations: 14

Abstract

Pigeons were trained to discriminate apparent movement and real movement in visual displays showing horizontal movement. Generalization testing on the dimension of directional movement yielded gradients that sloped as movement changed from horizontal to vertical. Evidence of generalization between apparent movement and real movement was found in equivalent response rates to training displays of either type. Extremely low response rates to training displays pulsating but showing no movement eliminated flicker as the basis of the discrimination.

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