“…Several comparative projects have found that not only humans, but also many familiar laboratory animals use amodal completion to identify partially occluded objects shown in 2-D displays (for mice, see Kanizsa, Renzi, Conte, Compostela, & Guerani, 1993; for Bengalese finches, Okanoya & Takahashi, 2000;for chickens, Forkman, 1998;Forkman & Vallortigara, 1999;Lea, Slater, & Ryan, 1996;Regolin & Vallortigara, 1995; for squirrel monkeys, Nagasaka & Osada, 2000; for Japanese macaques, Sugita, 1999; for rhesus macaques, Bakin, Nakayama, & Gilbert, 2000;Fujita, 2001;Osada & Schiller, 1994; for baboons, Deruelle, Barbet, Dépy, & Fagot, 2000;Fagot & Barbet, 2006; and for chimpanzees, Sato, Kanazawa, & Fujita, 1997). 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).…”