2001
DOI: 10.3758/bf03200507
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Perceptual completion in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) and pigeons (Columba livia)

Abstract: In a two-dimensional drawing, when the narrow edge of a bar appears to touch the edge of a large rectangle, humans overestimate the length of the bar (Kanizsa, 1979). Kanizsa has suggested that this illusion occurs because humans perceive the bar as continuing behind the rectangle and complete the "occluded" portion of the bar. Rhesus monkeys and pigeons were trained to classify black target bars with a variety of lengths as "long" or "short." In training, the bar was always located at the same distance from a… Show more

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Cited by 65 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
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“…Research with pigeons, however, has surprisingly yielded no clear evidence of amodal completion (Aust & Huber, 2006;Cerella, 1980;DiPietro, Wasserman, & Young, 2002;Fujita, 2001;Sekuler, Lee, & Shettleworth, 1996;Shimizu, 1998;Ushitani, Fujita, & Yamanaka, 2001;Watanabe & Furuya, 1997).…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Research with pigeons, however, has surprisingly yielded no clear evidence of amodal completion (Aust & Huber, 2006;Cerella, 1980;DiPietro, Wasserman, & Young, 2002;Fujita, 2001;Sekuler, Lee, & Shettleworth, 1996;Shimizu, 1998;Ushitani, Fujita, & Yamanaka, 2001;Watanabe & Furuya, 1997).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Fujita and his coauthors (Fujita, 2001; have proposed differences in foraging behavior to explain the difference between chickens and pigeons in amodal completion: Pigeons, as grain eaters, may have little need to search for food items behind obstacles, whereas chickens, as worm eaters, may have to search for partially visible prey. However, field studies have disclosed that wild rock pigeons (Columba livia) are not exclusively granivorous; during the early spring, earthworms may constitute as much as 60% of their crop content (Murton & Westwood, 1966).…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Despite at least ten research efforts in over 20 years, no positive evidence has ever been obtained for amodal completion behavior in pigeons (Aust & Huber, 2006;Cerella, 1980;DiPietro, Wasserman, & Young, 2002, Experiment 1;Fujita, 2001;Sekuler, Lee, & Shettleworth, 1996;Shimizu, 1998;Ushitani, Fujita, & Yamanaka, 2001;Watanabe & Furuya, 1997).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…In several nonhuman primate studies, empirical evidence suggests that squirrel monkeys (Nagasaka & Osada, 2000), Japanese macaques (Sugita, 1999), rhesus macaques (Bakin, et al, 2000;Fujita, 2001;Osada & Schiller, 1994;Schiller, 1995), baboons (Deruelle, Barbet, Depsy, & Fagot, 2000;Fagot, Barbet, Parron, & Deruelle, 2006), and chimpanzees (Sato, Kanazawa, & Fujita, 1997) may amodally complete a partially occluded object. Moreover, other studies have explored amodal completion behavior in non-primate species.…”
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confidence: 99%