Conditioning the pecking motions of pigeons

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_13EBD6E63F29
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Conditioning the pecking motions of pigeons
Journal
Behavioural Processes
Author(s)
Hörster W., Krumm E., Mohr C., Delius J. D.
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2002
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
58
Number
1-2
Pages
27-43
Language
english
Notes
1872-8308 (Electronic)
0376-6357 (Linking)
Journal article
Abstract
The spatio-temporal courses of head and neck motions of pigeons while pecking at small grains are described. Single and serial pecks are distinguished but the inter- and intraindividual variability of the peck kinetics is stressed. Pigeons were then trained with instrumental conditioning procedures to speed-up their pecking. A partial reinforcement schedule where pigeons had to peck repeatedly before receiving reward led to a mild shortening of inter-peck intervals at lower reinforcement rates but surprisingly, a lengthening at higher rates. A schedule where short inter-peck intervals were differentially rewarded yielded a pronounced abbreviation of the inter-peck intervals, but this was achieved by a reduction of the movement path rather than an increase in motion velocity. A schedule whereby increased approach velocities were differentially rewarded yielded marked movement accelerations. When pigeons were rewarded for diminished approach speeds they also showed significant movement decelerations. Finally, it is shown that pigeons could learn to reliably abort their peck approach movement when a visual stimulus signalling a penalty was occasionally presented during the approach movement. The proportion of successful peck interruptions decreased as these interruption signals occurred later during the approach phase. It is concluded that the pecking of pigeons is neither an innately fixed nor a visually ballistic movement. It is instead a multiply controlled and flexibly adaptable response pattern.
Create date
17/01/2011 19:07
Last modification date
20/08/2019 12:42
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