THE DEVELOPMENT OF EMERGENT DIFFERENTIAL SAMPLE BEHAVIOR IN PIGEONS

Three experiments attempted to replicate Manabe, Kawashima, and Staddon's (1995) finding of emergent differential sample behavior in budgerigars that has been interpreted as evidence of functional equivalence class formation. In Experiments 1 and 2, pigeons initially learned two‐sample/two‐alte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior 2002-11, Vol.78 (3), p.409-432
Hauptverfasser: Urcuioli, Peter J., Pierce, Jada N., Lionello-DeNolf, Karen M., Friedrich, Andrea, Fetterman, J. Gregor, Green, Courtney
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 409
container_title Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
container_volume 78
creator Urcuioli, Peter J.
Pierce, Jada N.
Lionello-DeNolf, Karen M.
Friedrich, Andrea
Fetterman, J. Gregor
Green, Courtney
description Three experiments attempted to replicate Manabe, Kawashima, and Staddon's (1995) finding of emergent differential sample behavior in budgerigars that has been interpreted as evidence of functional equivalence class formation. In Experiments 1 and 2, pigeons initially learned two‐sample/two‐alternative matching to sample in which comparison presentation was contingent on pecking one sample on a differential‐reinforcement‐of‐low‐rate (DRL) schedule and the other on a fixed‐ratio (FR) schedule. Later, two new samples were added to the task. Comparison presentation on these trials occurred after the first sample peck following a predetermined interval (Experiment 1) or after completion of either the DRL or FR requirement, whichever occurred first (Experiment 2). Experiment 1 found no evidence for emergent spaced versus rapid responding to the new samples as they established conditional control over the familiar choices. By contrast, differential responding did emerge for some pigeons in Experiment 2, with responding to each new sample coinciding with the pattern explicitly conditioned to the original sample occasioning the same comparison choice. This emergent effect, however, disappeared for most pigeons with continued training. Experiment 3 systematically replicated Experiment 2 using differential peck location as the sample behavior. Differential location pecking emerged to the new samples for most pigeons and remained intact throughout training. Our findings demonstrate a viable pigeon analogue to the budgerigar emergent calling paradigm and are discussed in terms of equivalence‐ and non‐equivalence‐based processes.
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subjects acquired equivalence
adventitious reinforcement
Animal behavior
Animals
Appetitive Behavior
Attention
Birds
Cognition & reasoning
Color Perception
Concept Formation
differential sample responding
Discrimination Learning
emergent behavior
key peck
Male
Orientation
pigeons
Probability Learning
Reaction Time
Reinforcement Schedule
Transfer (Psychology)
title THE DEVELOPMENT OF EMERGENT DIFFERENTIAL SAMPLE BEHAVIOR IN PIGEONS
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