Effects of varying stimulus size on object recognition in pigeons

The authors investigated the pigeon's ability to generalize object discrimination performance to smaller and larger versions of trained objects. In Experiment 1, they taught pigeons with line drawings of multipart objects and later tested the birds with both larger and smaller drawings. The pig...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of experimental psychology. Animal behavior processes Vol. 32; no. 4; p. 419
Main Authors Peissig, Jessie J, Kirkpatrick, Kimberly, Young, Michael E, Wasserman, Edward E, Biederman, Irving
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.10.2006
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Summary:The authors investigated the pigeon's ability to generalize object discrimination performance to smaller and larger versions of trained objects. In Experiment 1, they taught pigeons with line drawings of multipart objects and later tested the birds with both larger and smaller drawings. The pigeons exhibited significant generalization to new sizes, although they did show systematic performance decrements as the new size deviated from the original. In Experiment 2, the authors tested both linear and exponential size changes of computer-rendered basic shapes to determine which size transformation produced equivalent performance for size increases and decreases. Performance was more consistent with logarithmic than with linear scaling of size. This finding was supported in Experiment 3. Overall, the experiments suggest that the pigeon encodes size as a feature of objects and that the representation of size is most likely logarithmic.
ISSN:0097-7403
DOI:10.1037/0097-7403.32.4.419