Mice (Mus musculus) Do Not Perceive Emergent Gestalt

We have previously demonstrated that chimpanzees, similar to humans, can discriminate the orientations of a diagonal line better when lines are presented in redundant contexts than alone. In the present study, we examined whether the same redundant context facilitated diagonal-orientation discrimina...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. Animal behavior processes 2021-07, Vol.47 (3), p.274-280
Hauptverfasser: Goto, Kazuhiro, Watanabe, Hikari
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We have previously demonstrated that chimpanzees, similar to humans, can discriminate the orientations of a diagonal line better when lines are presented in redundant contexts than alone. In the present study, we examined whether the same redundant context facilitated diagonal-orientation discrimination in mice. Mice were presented one of three simultaneous, diagonal-orientation discrimination tasks: (a) presented alone, (b) presented with the context that resulted in emergent configurations in chimpanzees and humans, and (c) presented with the context not resulting in emergent configurations in chimpanzees or humans. In contrast to the facilitative effect of congruent context in chimpanzees and humans, the identical context did not facilitate the discrimination of the diagonal orientation in mice. This finding suggests that mice, unlike chimpanzees and humans, do not perceive emergent Gestalt.
ISSN:2329-8456
2329-8464
DOI:10.1037/xan0000291