Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture

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Standard

Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture. / Forkman, Björn.

I: Perception, Bind 27, Nr. 7, 1998, s. 861-867.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Forkman, B 1998, 'Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture', Perception, bind 27, nr. 7, s. 861-867. https://doi.org/10.1068/p270861

APA

Forkman, B. (1998). Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture. Perception, 27(7), 861-867. https://doi.org/10.1068/p270861

Vancouver

Forkman B. Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture. Perception. 1998;27(7):861-867. https://doi.org/10.1068/p270861

Author

Forkman, Björn. / Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture. I: Perception. 1998 ; Bind 27, Nr. 7. s. 861-867.

Bibtex

@article{c1f9492fd3514c3b86838c33ac5931a5,
title = "Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture",
abstract = "Hens (Gallus gallus domesticus) were taught to peck at a touch screen. On the screen was a grid on which a square and a circle were depicted. The square and the circle were given different positions at random for each trial, but were never overlapping. The hens were rewarded for pecking at the symbol that was higher up on the grid/screen, ie at the one that to a human observer was seen as being further away. Every tenth trial was a probe trial in which the animals were presented with either the circle overlapping the square or vice versa. The hens were never rewarded during the probe trials. As mentioned, the hens had learned to peck at the symbol that appeared to be further away during the nonprobe trials. During the probe trials the hens pecked at the symbol that was occluded, ie in the absence of any other cues they used occlusion to determine which of the two symbols was further away. The results suggest that not only can nonhuman animals use image height as a cue but that they can generalise this to situations in which occlusion is the only depth cue present.",
author = "Bj{\"o}rn Forkman",
year = "1998",
doi = "10.1068/p270861",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "861--867",
journal = "Perception",
issn = "0301-0066",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hens use occlusion to judge depth in a two-dimensional picture

AU - Forkman, Björn

PY - 1998

Y1 - 1998

N2 - Hens (Gallus gallus domesticus) were taught to peck at a touch screen. On the screen was a grid on which a square and a circle were depicted. The square and the circle were given different positions at random for each trial, but were never overlapping. The hens were rewarded for pecking at the symbol that was higher up on the grid/screen, ie at the one that to a human observer was seen as being further away. Every tenth trial was a probe trial in which the animals were presented with either the circle overlapping the square or vice versa. The hens were never rewarded during the probe trials. As mentioned, the hens had learned to peck at the symbol that appeared to be further away during the nonprobe trials. During the probe trials the hens pecked at the symbol that was occluded, ie in the absence of any other cues they used occlusion to determine which of the two symbols was further away. The results suggest that not only can nonhuman animals use image height as a cue but that they can generalise this to situations in which occlusion is the only depth cue present.

AB - Hens (Gallus gallus domesticus) were taught to peck at a touch screen. On the screen was a grid on which a square and a circle were depicted. The square and the circle were given different positions at random for each trial, but were never overlapping. The hens were rewarded for pecking at the symbol that was higher up on the grid/screen, ie at the one that to a human observer was seen as being further away. Every tenth trial was a probe trial in which the animals were presented with either the circle overlapping the square or vice versa. The hens were never rewarded during the probe trials. As mentioned, the hens had learned to peck at the symbol that appeared to be further away during the nonprobe trials. During the probe trials the hens pecked at the symbol that was occluded, ie in the absence of any other cues they used occlusion to determine which of the two symbols was further away. The results suggest that not only can nonhuman animals use image height as a cue but that they can generalise this to situations in which occlusion is the only depth cue present.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0032242545&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1068/p270861

DO - 10.1068/p270861

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 10209648

AN - SCOPUS:0032242545

VL - 27

SP - 861

EP - 867

JO - Perception

JF - Perception

SN - 0301-0066

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 338346681