Title of article
Cebus cf. apella exhibits rapid acquisition of complex stimulus relations and emergent performance by exclusion
Author/Authors
Ana Leda de Faria Brino، نويسنده , , Ana Paula Bemerguy Assumpcao، نويسنده , , Rodolfo da Silva Campos، نويسنده , , Olavo de Faria Galvao، نويسنده , , William J. McIlvane، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
7
From page
209
To page
215
Abstract
A “second generation” matching-to-sample procedure that minimizes past sources of artifacts involves (1) successive discrimination between sample stimuli, (2) stimulus displays ranging from four to 16 comparisons, (3) variable stimulus locations to avoid unwanted stimulus-location control, and (4) high accuracy levels (e.g., 90% correct on a 16-choice task in which chance accuracy is 6%). Examples of behavioral engineering with experienced capuchin monkeys included four-choice matching problems with video images of monkeys with substantially above-chance matching in a single session and 90% matching within six sessions. Exclusion performance was demonstrated by interspersing non-identical sample-comparison pairs within a baseline of a nine-comparison identity-matching-to-sample procedure with pictures as stimuli. The test for exclusion presented the newly “mapped” stimulus in a situation in which exclusion was not possible. Degradation of matching between physically non-identical forms occurred while baseline identity accuracy was sustained at high levels, thus confirming that Cebus cf. apella is capable of exclusion. Additionally, exclusion performance when baseline matching relations involved non-identical stimuli was shown.
Keywords
exclusion , video image stimuli , Cebus cf. apella , generalized identity matching
Journal title
Psychology & Neuroscience
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Psychology & Neuroscience
Record number
659146
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