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      Learning the configuration of a landmark array: I. Touch-screen studies with pigeons and humans.

      Journal of comparative psychology (Washington, D.C. : 1983)
      Adult, Animals, Appetitive Behavior, Columbidae, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Recall, Orientation, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Problem Solving, Species Specificity, Touch, Transfer (Psychology)

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          Abstract

          Pigeons and humans searched on a touch-screen monitor for an unmarked goal located relative to an array of landmarks presented in varied screen locations. After training with the goal centered in various square arrays of 4 landmarks, humans, but not pigeons, transferred accurately to arrays with novel elements. Humans searched in the middle of expanded arrays, whereas pigeons preserved the distance and direction to a single landmark. When trained with the goal centered below 2 identical horizontally aligned landmarks, humans responded to horizontal expansions or contractions of the array by shifting their search vertically, preserving angles from landmarks to goal. Pigeons did not adjust their search vertically. Humans trained with a single landmark adjusted search distance when landmark size was changed. Both pigeons and humans use the configuration of a landmark array, but the underlying processes seem to differ.

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