“…Studies in the Morris water maze have shown that animals trained with four (i.e., A, B, C and D) landmarks performed less accurately when tested with sets of two landmarks alone than animals initially trained with these two landmarks in isolation. This could be because B and C, or D and A landmarks alone are perceived as different from A, B, C and D all together, and the response established to one stimulus configuration cannot be transferred perfectly to a different configuration, resulting in generalization decrement (Pearce, 1987(Pearce, , 1994Chamizo, Rodríguez, Espinet, & Mackintosh, 2012). Another way of expressing this result would be to say that the four landmark case suffers from greater overshadowing of one landmark by the others than the two landmark case, but we note that Chamizo et al (2012) demonstrated that the addition of two new landmarks, and the removal of two old ones, both disrupted performance.…”