Publication | Closed Access
Object permanence and working memory in cats (Felis catus).
46
Citations
18
References
1994
Year
Felis CatusCognitionAttentionHuman MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyObject PermanenceMemoryWorking MemoryCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsPerception SystemCognitive ScienceVision ResearchExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopEye TrackingSpatial CognitionInvisible Displacement Tests
Cats (Felis catus) find an object when it is visibly moved behind a succession of screens. However, when the object is moved behind a container and is invisibly transferred from the container to the back of a screen, cats try to find the object at or near the container rather than at the true hiding place. Four experiments were conducted to study search behavior and working memory in visible and invisible displacement tests of object permanence. Experiment 1 compared performance in single and in double visible displacement trials. Experiment 2 analyzed search behavior in invisible displacement tests and in analogs using a transparent container. Experiments 3 and 4 tested predictions made from Experiment 1 and 2 in a new situation of object permanence. Results showed that only the position changes that cats have directly perceived are encoded and activated in working memory, because they are unable to represent or infer invisible movements.
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