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Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) Respond to Nonvisible Sets After One-by-One Addition and Removal of Items.
151
Citations
69
References
2004
Year
PrimatologyCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesNonvisible SetsEvolutionary BiologyCognitionComparative PsychologyNumerousness JudgmentsOne-by-one AdditionSocial SciencesPrimate BehaviorOpaque CupExperimental PsychologyAnimal MindAnimal BehaviorSocial CognitionPsychologyVisible Set
Two chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) made numerousness judgments of nonvisible sets of items. In Experiment 1, 1-10 items were dropped 1 at a time into an opaque cup, and then an additional 1-10 items were dropped 1 at a time into another opaque cup. The chimpanzees' performance levels were high and were more dependent on factors indicative of an analogue-magnitude mechanism for representation of set size than on an object file mechanism. In Experiment 2, a 3rd visible set was made available after the sequential presentation of the first 2 sets. The chimpanzees again performed at high levels in selecting the largest of the 3 sets. In Experiment 3, 1 of the 2 initially presented sets was reduced in number by the sequential removal of 1, 2, or 3 items. Both chimpanzees performed above chance levels for the removal of 1, but not more than 1, item.
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