Title of article
Pigeons integrate past knowledge across sensory modalities
Author/Authors
Claudia Stephan، نويسنده , , THOMAS BUGNYAR، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
9
From page
605
To page
613
Abstract
Advanced inferring abilities that are used for predator recognition and avoidance have been documented in a variety of animal species that produce alarm calls. In contrast, evidence for cognitive abilities that underpin predation avoidance in nonalarm-calling species is restricted to associative learning of heterospecific alarm calls and predator presence. We investigated cognitive capacities that underlie the perception and computation of external information beyond associative learning by addressing contextual information processing in pigeons, Columba livia, a bird species without specific alarm calls. We used a habituation/dishabituation paradigm across sensory modes to test pigeonsʹ context-dependent inferring abilities. The birds reliably took previous knowledge about predator presence into account and responded with predator-specific scanning behaviour only if predator presence was not indicated before or if the perceived level of urgency increased. Hence, pigeonsʹ antipredator behaviour was not based on the physical properties of displayed stimuli or their referential content alone but on contextual information, indicated by the kind and order of stimulus presentation and different sensory modes.
Keywords
Columba livia , Pigeon , Predator recognition , cross-modal recognition , response urgency , contextual understanding
Journal title
Animal Behaviour
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Animal Behaviour
Record number
1284467
Link To Document