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1.
Psychon Bull Rev ; 23(3): 915-21, 2016 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26620957

RESUMEN

When choosing between a piece of cake now versus a slimmer waistline in the future, many of us have difficulty with self-control. Food-caching species, however, regularly hide food for later recovery, sometimes waiting months before retrieving their caches. It remains unclear whether these long-term choices generalize outside of the caching domain. We hypothesized that the ability to save for the future is a general tendency that cuts across different situations. To test this hypothesis, we measured and experimentally manipulated caching to evaluate its relationship with operant measures of self-control in pinyon jays (Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus). We found no correlation between caching and self-control at the individual level, and experimentally increasing caching did not influence self-control. The self-control required for caching food, therefore, does not carry over to other foraging tasks, suggesting that it is domain specific in pinyon jays.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Animal , Conducta de Elección , Conducta Alimentaria , Autocontrol , Animales , Condicionamiento Operante , Femenino , Alimentos , Almacenamiento de Alimentos , Masculino , Passeriformes
2.
J Exp Psychol Anim Learn Cogn ; 40(2): 185-94, 2014 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24893217

RESUMEN

Visual search for complex natural targets requires focal attention, either cued by predictive stimulus associations or primed by a representation of the most recently detected target. Because both processes can focus visual attention, cuing and priming were compared in an operant search task to evaluate their relative impacts on performance and to determine the nature of their interaction in combined treatments. Blue jays were trained to search for pairs of alternative targets among distractors. Informative or ambiguous color cues were provided before each trial, and targets were presented either in homogeneous blocked sequences or in constrained random order. Initial task acquisition was facilitated by priming in general, but was significantly retarded when targets were both cued and primed, indicating that the two processes interfered with each other during training. At asymptote, attentional effects were manifested mainly in inhibition, increasing latency in miscued trials and decreasing accuracy on primed trials following an unexpected target switch. A combination of cuing and priming was found to interfere with performance in such unexpected trials, apparently a result of the limited capacity of working memory. Because the ecological factors that promote priming or cuing are rather disparate, it is not clear whether they ever simultaneously contribute to natural predatory search.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Aves/fisiología , Cognición/fisiología , Señales (Psicología) , Fijación Ocular/fisiología , Aprendizaje Seriado/fisiología , Análisis de Varianza , Animales , Condicionamiento Operante , Estimulación Luminosa , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología
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