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Title: Abstract-concept learning carryover effects from the initial training set in pigeons (Columba livia). Author: Nakamura T, Wright AA, Katz JS, Bodily KD, Sturz BR. Journal: J Comp Psychol; 2009 Feb; 123(1):79-89. PubMed ID: 19236147. Abstract: Three groups of pigeons were trained in a same/different task with 32, 64, or 1,024 color-picture stimuli. They were tested with novel transfer pictures. The training-testing cycle was repeated with training-set doublings. The 32-item group learned the same/different task as rapidly as a previous 8-item group and transferred better than the 8-item group at the 32-item training set. The 64- and 1,024-item groups learned the task only somewhat slower than other groups, but their transfer was better and equivalent to baseline performances. These results show that pigeons trained with small sets (e.g., 8 items) have carryover effects that hamper transfer when the training set is expanded. Without carryover effects (i.e., initial transfer from the 32- and 64-item groups), pigeons show the same degree of transfer as rhesus and capuchin monkeys at these same set sizes. This finding has implications for the general ability of abstract-concept learning across species with different neural architectures.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]