Publication | Closed Access
Use of landmark configuration in pigeons and humans: II. Generality across search tasks.
143
Citations
23
References
1997
Year
EngineeringSearch TasksCognitionBrain OrganizationAttentionPsychologySocial SciencesLandmark ConfigurationVisual CognitionSearch SpaceComparative PsychologyCognitive NeuroscienceMultisensory IntegrationPerception SystemSpatial ReasoningCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceLandmark SpacingExperimental PsychologyAnimal BehaviourHuman-computer InteractionSpatial CognitionAnimal Behavior
Pigeons and humans searched for a goal that was hidden in varied locations within a search space. The goal location was fixed relative to an array of identical landmarks. Pigeons searched on the laboratory floor, and humans searched on a table top or an outdoor field. In Experiment 1, the goal was centered in a square array of 4 landmarks. When the spacing between landmarks was increased, humans searched in the middle of the expanded array, whereas pigeons searched in locations that preserved distance and direction to an individual landmark. In Experiment 2, the goal was centered between and a perpendicular distance away from 2 landmarks aligned in the left-fight dimension. When landmark spacing was increased, humans, but not pigeons, shifted their searching away from the landmarks along the perpendicular axis. These results parallel those obtained in touch-screen tasks. Thus, pigeons and humans differ in how they use landmark configuration.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1